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#pale folklore and the mantle
daughterovmary · 1 year
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anyone here listen to agalloch 🥺 i think they are so cool
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hermionehymn · 2 months
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Hello, this is my fanfiction about The Marauders.
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The Marauders: Through Moonlight and Mischief
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Chapter One: Lily Evans
Part One
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It was a rainy autumn morning at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. The sky was a dreary shade of grey, and a steady drizzle tapped rhythmically against the ancient window panes of the Gryffindor boys' dormitory. The castle itself seemed to groan in sympathy with the weather, its long and narrow corridors echoing with the sounds of sleepy students and the occasional clatter of a bottle-brushing rat.
Inside the fifth-year dormitory, an orchestra of snoring resonated from all four corners of the room. James Potter was sprawled inelegantly across his bed, his glasses hanging loosely from one ear. Sirius Black lay tangled in his covers like he'd just survived a wrestling match with an invisible foe. Peter Pettigrew, curled up like a small, pale ball, snored softly, while Remus Lupin sat up against his bed, an open book in his lap and dark circles accentuating his tired eyes.
Remus had been up since dawn, perusing a highly engrossing tome about magical creatures and their impact on Muggle folklore. But now, the clock on the mantle chimed ominously, reminding him that their first class was about to begin in less than half an hour.
"Right then, time to wake up," muttered Remus, pulling out his wand. He pointed it at Sirius first. "Tempus revelei," he whispered, casting a spell designed to precisely tell the time and nudging a small alarm charm hidden underneath Sirius's pillow.
"Bloody hell!" Sirius jolted upright, his grey eyes wide and disoriented. "What’s going on? Ah, the time!" His expression shifted from bewilderment to irritation.
"Couldn't you have come up with a less startling way, Moony?"Remus grinned mildly. "Maybe, but then you might not have woken up.
"Taking this as a hint, James groaned, forcing an eyelid open. "Do we really have to get up? It's abysmal out there.
""It's always abysmal during Potions," Peter muttered from under his blanket.
"Well, Slughorn’s not going to give us extra points for punctuality if we’re late, that’s for sure," Remus said, attempting to rouse some sense of duty in his friends.
James finally dragged himself up, straightening his glasses. With a lazy flick of his wand, he levitated his clothes from the trunk into his hands. "Accio clothes!" he incanted, making the process so much smoother.
The room felt even colder as they donned their uniforms, the dampness creeping into their bones. Hogwarts’ enchanted fireplaces had yet to fully warm the castle on this dreary day.
The staircases to the Great Hall were as tricky as ever, but the Marauders skillfully navigated them, chatting and laughing along the way. They arrived just as a particularly potent gust of wind blew through the hall, ruffling the enchanted ceiling's attempt to mimic the weather outside.
James noticed Lily Evans almost immediately. She was seated at the Gryffindor table, a steaming mug of tea in her hands. Her fiery red hair seemed to glow even in the muted light of the hall, and her green eyes were focused intently on the Daily Prophet.
"Bloody hell, who is that?" James asked, his voice betraying both awe and bewilderment.
"Who, her?" Sirius followed his gaze, a grin spreading across his face. "That's Lily Evans. Muggle-born, top of our year, Prefect—though you wouldn't know it from the way she jinxes anyone who crosses her improperly. She's brilliant, mate.
"James' heartbeat felt like a drum in his chest.
"I've never seen anyone like—""Oh, not this again," muttered Peter as he stifled a yawn, his voice tinged with both amusement and irritation. "Give it a rest, James. She’s not even noticed you.
""Yet," Sirius added with a smirk.
James barely heard them. Instead, he was concentrating on how to approach this fascinating creature, the beginnings of a thousand plans forming in his restless mind. This moment—this very moment where he was captivated by Lily’s beauty and intelligence—felt like the start of something new and profound. If only he could get her to notice him… and perhaps impress her without making a complete fool of himself.
Remus observed James’s reaction with silent understanding. "Come on, Potter, we’ll be late if you keep standing there like a lovesick Flobberworm.
"The morning’s classes proceeded like clockwork, each lesson dampened by the incessant rain outside the window. First came Potions, where James barely avoided blowing up his cauldron, distracted as he was by occasionally glancing over at Lily. Then Defence Against the Dark Arts, where Remus, as usual, excelled and earned house points for Gryffindor.
Charms was last before lunch, and Professor Flitwick was particularly enthusiastic. "Today, we're going to practice the Disarming Charm, Expelliarmus!" he announced, standing on a pile of books to see over his desk.
"Paired up, everyone!"James found himself paired with Lily by sheer luck—or perhaps it was Professor Flitwick's idea of a good match. He felt his palms sweat, but he steeled himself, sending a lopsided grin her way.
"Ready, Evans?" he asked, brandishing his wand.
Lily merely raised an eyebrow, her green eyes reflecting a mix of challenge and amusement. "You bet, Potter.
"The lesson flew by, and by the end, James and Lily were the last two standing. Both had successfully disarmed the other multiple times, much to the amusement and applause of their classmates. As they left the classroom, Lily gave James a small nod of approval, her eyes softening just a fraction.
"Not bad, Potter.
"His heart skipped a beat at her words, and for the first time, he felt that maybe, just maybe, there was a chance he could win her over.
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dust-n-roses · 4 months
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May First Listens
Classic metal: Time, Into The Unknown, Dead Again, 9 – Mercyful Fate
Prog rock: Out of the Coma – Comus
Prog/post metal: The Mantle, Pale Folklore, Ashes Against The Grain, Marrow of the Spirit, The Serpent & The Sphere, Of Stone Wind & Pallor, The White – Agalloch; E – Enslaved
(Melo)Death metal: Symbolic – Death; Lunar Strain, The Jester Race, Subterranean – In Flames; Resurrection Through Carnage, The Fathomless Mastery – Bloodbath
Indie rock: Transcendental Youth – The Mountain Goats
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scotianostra · 3 years
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The Corryvreckan.
The Gulf of Corryvreckan is a narrow strait between the islands of Jura and Scarba, in Argyll and Bute, off the west coast of mainland Scotland. It is famous for its strong tidal currents and standing waves.  The whirlpool which forms  at the right state of the tide is the third largest whirlpool in the world.
With this brings loads of stories of loss of life and miraculous escapes, the most famous, well in my opinion happened in 1947, when author George Orwell, who was in Jura to complete his internationally famous 1984, almost drowned with his young nieces and nephews after sailing too close to the whirlpool.
The Corryvreckan or to give it the Gaelic name Coire Bhreacain meaning "cauldron of the speckled seas also is a place of legends and folklore, one of which surrounds  Norse king Breacan attempting to woo a princess. He tried to sail near the whirlpool. However, other people claim that he was attempting to flee from his father’s wrath. Either way, the whirlpool beat him and now the whirlpool may be named after Breacan, or a Gaelic pun on his name.
  Another legend revolves around Charles Mackay’s poem “The Kelpie of Corrievrackan,” which tells the story of a woman who leaves her lover for sea kelp. She tried to go after the kelp by diving to its home (which just so happens to be at the bottom of the whirlpool). Therefore, she drowns trying to seduce a piece of seaweed. This piece of folklore was meant to be a “warning to fickle maidens,” claiming that if you are unfaithful to your lover, you’ll end up dying.
He mounted his steed of the water clear, And sat on his saddle of sea-weed sere; He held his bridal of strings of pearl, Dug out of the depths where the sea-snakes curl. II. He put on his vest of the whirlpool froth, 5 Soft and dainty as velvet cloth, And donn’d his mantle of sand so white, And grasp’d his sword of the coral bright. III. And away he gallop’d, a horseman free, Spurring his steed through the stormy sea, 10 Clearing the billows with bound and leap — Away, away, o’er the foaming deep. IV. By Scarba’s rock, by Lunga’s shore, By Garveloch isles where breakers roar, With his horse’s hoofs he dash’d the spray, 15 And on to Loch Buy, away, away! V. On to Loch Buy all day he rode, And reach’d the shore as sunset glow’d, And stopp’d to hear the sounds of joy, That rose from the hills and glens of Moy. 20 VI. The morrow was May, and on the green They’d lit the fire of Beltan E’en, And danced around, and piled it high With peat and heather, and pine logs dry.
VII. A piper play’d a lightsome reel, 25 And timed the dance with toe and heel; While wives look’d on, as lad and lass Trod it merrily o’er the grass. VIII. And Jessie (fickle and fair was she) Sat with Evan beneath a tree, 30 And smiled with mingled love and pride, And half agreed to be his bride. IX. The Kelpie gallop’d o’er the green — He seem’d a knight of noble mien; And old and young stood up to see, 35 And wonder’d who the knight could be. X. His flowing locks were auburn bright, His cheeks were ruddy, his eyes flash’d light; And as he sprang from his good gray steed, He look’d a gallant youth indeed. 40 XI. And Jessie’s fickle heart beat high, As she caught the stranger’s glancing eye; And when he smiled, “Ah well,” thought she, “I wish this knight came courting me!” XII. He took two steps towards her seat — 45 “Wilt thou be mine, O maiden sweet?” He took her lily-white hand, and sigh’d, “Maiden, maiden, be my bride!” XIII. And Jessie blush’d, and whisper’d soft — “Meet me to-night when the moon’s aloft. 50 I’ve dream’d, fair knight, long time of thee —
I thought thou camest courting me.” XIV. When the moon her yellow horn display’d, Alone to the trysting went the maid; When all the stars were shining bright, 55 Alone to the trysting went the knight. XV. “I have loved thee long, I have loved thee well, Maiden, oh more than words can tell! Maiden, thine eyes like diamonds shine; Maiden, maiden, be thou mine!” 60 XVI. “Fair sir, thy suit I’ll ne’er deny — Though poor my lot, my hopes are high; I scorn a lover of low degree — None but a knight shall marry me.” XVII. He took her by the hand so white, 65 And gave her a ring of gold so bright; “Maiden, whose eyes like diamonds shine, Maiden, maiden, now thou’rt mine!” XVIII. He lifted her up on his steed of gray, And they rode till morning away, away — 70 Over the mountain and over the moor, And over the rocks to the dark sea-shore. XIX. “We have ridden east, we have ridden west — I’m weary, fair knight, and I fain would rest. Say, is thy dwelling beyond the sea? 75 Hast thou a good ship waiting for me?” XX. “I have no dwelling beyond the sea, I have no good ship waiting for thee:
Thou shalt sleep with me on a couch of foam, And the depths of the ocean shall be thy home.” 80 XXI. The gray steed plunged in the billows clear, And the maiden’s shrieks were sad to hear; — “Maiden, whose eyes like diamonds shine — Maiden, maiden, now thou’rt mine!” XXII. Loud the cold sea-blast did blow 85 As they sank ’mid the angry waves below — Down to the rocks where the serpents creep, Twice five hundred fathoms deep. XXIII. At morn a fisherman sailing by Saw her pale corse floating high. 90 He knew the maid by her yellow hair And her lily skin so soft and fair. XXIV. Under a rock on Scarba’s shore, Where the wild winds sigh and the breakers roar, They dug her a grave by the water clear, 95 Among the sea-weeds salt and sere. XXV. And every year at Beltan E’en, The Kelpie gallops across the green, On a steed as fleet as the wintry wind, With Jessie’s mournful ghost behind. 100 XXVI. I warn you, maids, whoever you be, Beware of pride and vanity; And ere on change of love you reckon, Beware the Kelpie of Corryvreckan. (From Charles Mackay, Legends of the Isles and Other
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dokkaebiking · 3 years
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“I beg you, eat me up. Want me down to the marrow.” ― Hélène Cixous
A KakaIru (Kakashi x Iruka) series written for both the KakaIru Mini Big Bang 2020 & 2021~! It’s set in modern day, but with Japanese folklore come to life, monsters abound, and a touch of darkness that can, unfortunately, be found in our real world. Artwork for the series was made by the incredible @i-drive-a-nii-san​ (of which I used one of the pieces for the title card above) and I cannot overstate how beautiful it is. If you like your romance with a touch of horror and mystery, check out the series below:
Follow the Blood
If you were to ask Iruka what scared him the most he wouldn’t say revenants, or demons, or goblins and ghouls. He wouldn’t even say it was the dark itself, and what the imagination could twist it into. No, what scared Iruka the most had a very real face, one that said it was his family but then locked him away like a dirty secret. He was absolutely desperate to get away from that face that was as unmoving as a Noh mask, but just as uncannily emotive and terrifying.
So when Iruka claws his way to freedom and runs for his life, the tragic irony of him being discovered by a literal monster of legend isn’t lost on him. It was almost funny, how he escaped one monster to wind up found by another, but the joke fell flat when he lost consciousness in the oddly gently grasp of the beast, and woke up alive and well in an unfamiliar but welcoming room.
Iruka would come to learn that, sometimes, it’s the actual monsters in the world that are the safest to be around, while those who hide amongst us humans were the ones to be truly feared.
And sometimes…sometimes falling in love didn’t always start with seeing a beautiful face, or hearing a charming laugh.
Sometimes it began with the sound of rattling bones.
And the Lion Will Chase
It began with the sound of rattling bones, and would end with the rustling of the lion’s mane.
After Iruka is saved by the mysterious family that lives within the Inari shrine he’d found sanctuary in, Iruka slowly but surely adjusts to this new life he’d been given, but is haunted by visions of a terrifyingly gentle Gashadokuro when he sleeps or daydreams. Hatake Kakashi, who is a family friend of the Uzumaki’s and frequents the shrine, similarly haunts Iruka’s waking hours.
As the years pass, and Iruka’s first step into adulthood nears, he finds his heart reaching out for both man and beast. But every time he reaches out, those pale white bones, that soft silver hair, step out of reach, and Iruka knows it’s out of hesitation and fear. The fear of a monster who is scared to love and be loved.
He’s far from deterred, however, as he takes on the mantle of a lion and gives chase towards the man, the monster, that has captured his heart.
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dat4l0re · 3 years
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was tagged by @unknowndeadsoldier. <3
Suppose you're being sent to a deserted island for the rest of your life, and you can only choose 10 records to bring with you and those are the only albums you can listen to for the remainder of your life; what albums are they?
nooooooo not only 10 *cries*
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Agalloch - Pale Folklore Agalloch - The Mantle Agalloch - Ashes Against the Grain My Dying Bride - The Dreadful Hours Cocteau Twins - Heaven or Las Vegas Tristania - World of Glass Zetandel & Tiff Lacey - Songs Under Moonlight Taylor Davis - Melodies of Hyrule: Music from "the Legend of Zelda" Novembre - Dreams d'Azur Iron Maiden - Fear of the Dark
i will tag @saveatruckrideoptimusprime, @bonesandivy, @qkumber, @tough-girl9 if you wanna do it, and anyone else who wants to
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hesselives · 4 years
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Chapters: 2/2 Fandom: Tsubasa: Reservoir Chronicle Rating: Mature Warnings: Graphic Depictions Of Violence Relationships: Fay D. Fluorite/Kurogane, Kurogane & the People of Suwa, Fai & the People of Suwa, Original Character(s)/Original Character(s) Characters: Fay D. Fluorite, Fai, Kurogane Additional Tags: outsider pov, Resettling Suwa, Post-Series, Established Relationship, POV Original Character, That Time Everyone Thought Fai Was A Youkai, Kurogane as the Lord of Suwa, Fai as Kurogane's Consort and Priest, Cast of Original POV Characters, Vaguely Fantasy Feudal Japan, Completely Ignoring the Concept of Homophobia, In Which Kurogane and Fai are Actual Figures of Legend, Fai's Magic, References to 'Marital Duties', Japanese Mythology & Folklore, References to Canon-Typical Tragic Pasts, canon-typical gore and violence, Assassination Attempt(s), That Time Fai Was An Actual BAMF, Hurt/Comfort, Angst with a Happy Ending, Canon-Typical Serious Injury, Will Fai Please Stop Being Self-Sacrificing For Once, No Beta We Die Like Sakura-chan In Infinity, Canon-Typical Vampirism, Consensual Vampirism, Shinobi and Kunoichi Summary:
“The rumours say Kurogane-dono married a great beauty – a foreigner, with powerful magic and a lovely face.”
That the new kannushi has powerful magic is no surprise; to train under the Tsukuyomi he would need to be skilled beyond even the highest expectations of the priesthood that serves the palace at Shirasagi.
“I heard he has yellow hair, pale like summer grass,” chimes Momo, sweet voice full to bursting with giggles at the thought of such gossip. “Summer hair and the bluest eyes – blue like gemstones!”
Omasu blinks slowly, pleased with herself. “You see? A great beauty. As befitting the Lord’s Consort.”
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one of the most stunning fics i’ve read in a long while!
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alydiarackham · 5 years
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(Cover by me)
Bauldr’s Tears: Retelling Loki’s Fate
Chapter One
 “Loki Farbautison,” the deep, quiet voice resounded through the white marble courtyard. “You have been accused of murdering an Aesir—a willful and wicked act that cannot, through any cunning, be undone. Do you deny it?”
Slate gray clouds hung low, blocking the sun. Icy wind whipped between the pillars, tugging at the long, black, draping clothes and loosened blonde hair of the crowd of courtiers who hugged the perimeter. All of their pale faces, stark eyes, turned toward the center of the yard, where a young man stood alone.
He also wore black, with tatters hanging down from his shoulders and long sleeves. His long, colorless, shackled hands did not move, nor did his lean form shift. His curly, dark brown hair ruffled in the wind, strands falling down across his white brow.
He slowly raised his head. Beneath ink-dark eyebrows, striking eyes lifted to the far end of the courtyard—eyes like a gray dawn; alive, but distant. The courtiers focused on his angular, handsome face, noble nose, cheekbones and chin, and firm, quiet mouth. They watched him unblinkingly, waiting for his answer.
He took a breath, and slightly lifted his right eyebrow.
“Is there a point in answering?” He spoke lowly, each word elegant and precise. Vapor issued from his lips. The crowd seethed. Their murmurs rumbled like low thunder.
And the first one who had spoken—a tall, white-bearded king garbed in night, seated in a wooden throne on the dais—slammed his hand down on the armrest.
The blow shook the air.
His single sapphire eye blazed, and he gritted his teeth. His wizened brow knotted around his eye patch, and his fists clenched.
“You murdered my son,” he snarled. “You, who we took in as one of our own. You, who have been our…our friend for countless centuries. You have betrayed us.” The one-eyed king paused. His voice roughened. “You have betrayed me.”
The court murmured and groaned. Some shielded their eyes, others leaned their heads against their loved ones’. Loki Farbautison twisted his left hand and lifted his shoulder. His chains clinked. As if he could not help it, he glanced to the king’s right, where a magnificent, golden-headed prince stood, clad in dulled gold armor, and a heavy thundercloud of a cape that hung from his shoulders to his ankles. For an instant, Loki’s gray eyes met the prince’s burning blue ones. But the prince’s brow twisted, his eyes closed, and he turned his lion-like head away, pressing a hand to his mouth and over his bearded jaw. Loki swallowed, and turned again to the king. He raised his eyebrows.
“What can I say?” he asked.
The king would not look at him. His hand flexed, and he stared fixedly at something to his right.
“You make no defense, you will not answer for your conduct,” the king said hoarsely. “Therefore, we must acknowledge that there can be no question of your guilt.” He shut his eye, and closed his fist. “You murdered my son, a prince of Asgard. There is only one possible consequence.”
The court held its breath. The blue-eyed prince turned to hide the tears that spilled down his face. The king lifted his chin.
“Loki Farbautison,” he declared into the silence. “You are sentenced to death.”
Loki’s long-lashed eyes closed. Overhead, a groan of thunder rolled through the clouds.
And it began to snow.
Three Months Earlier…
Thunder growled around the thick wooden walls of the house as Marina Faroe crept from the sitting room toward the library, holding only a lit candle in her right hand. As her stocking feet slid across the floorboards, she bit her lip and prayed she wouldn’t trip over any of the boxes she had left out. The darkness hung thick and heavy around her, unwilling to flit away as her candlelight intruded. With her free hand, she pulled her long cashmere wrap closer around her very slight form, though the movement made her stiff arm ache from her thumb to her elbow.
She slipped through the pokey corridor, and then her feet padded onto the deep red, tapestry-like carpet of the library. She crossed the room, then reached up and pushed her candle down into a wooden candlestick standing on the carved mantle. Then, she knelt, groped for the matchbox, and leaned into the fireplace to snap flame from a single match, then light the tinder and logs inside.
 It was difficult—the last three fingers of her left hand stayed curled close to her palm, and her wrist refused to extend more than halfway, leaving all the work to be done by her right hand, and the forefinger and weak thumb of her left. Besides which, it hurt.
However, after a few minutes of quiet struggle, a small fire danced against the rough-hewn stones, warming her narrow face, and lighting her hazel eyes. She dusted her right hand off on her jeans, then pushed her sleek, unbound black hair out of her face. Taking a breath, she lifted her head, folded her arms, and glanced around the room.
Deep bookshelves covered all the walls, except for the door and the wide fireplace. Empty cardboard boxes sat against the north wall, their former contents now lining the shelves. Ancient, leather-bound manuscripts, their spines ragged, their pages yellowed, sat in uneven rows, the titles illegible in the flickering half dark. But Marina knew them all—knew them like weathered faces of old friends. They belonged to her dad’s collection: volumes of Norse poetry, Viking travel records, maps, folklore, songs and legends. Some had been inscribed by hand, in now-faded ink. Others were first editions of research published a hundred years ago. She had read every one.
Marina sighed, bringing her knees up to her chest and wrapping her right arm around them, leaning back against more unpacked boxes as the scent of burning pine and the crackle of the flames filled the silence.
She glanced up at the softly-ticking, intricately-carved Swiss clock sitting on one side of the mantle. She could barely see its face by the light of the candle—it was past ten. Her delicate mouth hardened. The storm had knocked the electricity out, so she couldn’t charge her dead cell phone, and she hadn’t set up her landline yet. She couldn’t have called her mother in New York at nine-thirty. Even if she had wanted to.
She shifted, pressing her left arm against her stomach, turning her head to consider the empty shelves on the south wall. Tomorrow, she would set her dad’s collection of rusty Viking swords on the middle ones, along with his glass cases of beaten coins. She would heft the small, stone idols of Odin, Loki, Thor and Frigga to the very top shelves, so they could be studied, but never touched. And in the far corner, across the room, she would stand the three-hundred-year-old half-tree up, so that all of the wide-eyed, gaping faces and squatty bodies of the dwarves carved into it could be seen in the firelight. And over the mantle…
She got up. Thunder rumbled again, shaking the upper stories. Marina stepped nimbly through the maze of boxes on the floor, and bent over one in the back. She pried the lid open, then reached in with her right hand and pulled on a thick, gold-painted frame.
Carefully, she slid it up and out. Firelight flashed against the glass. She straightened, and held it up. For a long while, she just stood there, gazing at the broad picture within the frame. Then, she turned, moved back to the mantle, and, grunting, managed to lift the picture up and set it there, and let it ease back to rest against the wall. She stepped back and gazed at it, keeping her left arm pressed to her chest. She took a deep breath, and her lips moved to mouth the words penned beneath the strange drawing. Words she had whispered thousands of times.
“Stien til Asgard…”
Silence answered her. Silence that had always been interrupted before by a deep, eager voice forming words of explanation—a bright eye, a roughened hand reaching up to point at the illuminated edges, a smile bordered by a dark, graying beard…
A tear escaped her guard. It spilled down her cheek. She swiped it away, swallowed hard and tightened her jaw—but the flutter of the candle’s flame drew her gaze back to the picture. Marina’s arms tightened around herself as thunder once again grumbled overhead, and the spring rain broke loose, and lashed the outer walls.
 Chapter Two
  Marina took a deep breath of cool morning air, thick with the scent of rain, and shut the front door behind her, as the sunlight warmed her whole body. She stepped down the short landing and turned back to glance up at her new house. “New” being a relative word—it was actually only new to her.
She could see it better now than she had when she had moved in. Yesterday, it had been cloudy, and she had ducked her head and hauled boxes inside between spats of rain. But today, golden sunshine bathed the whole house, and she stopped on the brick pathway to look for a moment.
Three stories, all dark weathered wood, with a peaked roof and simple, sturdy bric-a-brac around the thick-pillared porch, and upper windows. Marina narrowed her eyes at those dusty, flaking windows. They needed cleaned and sealed and painted. And she was fairly certain that the deep-green, hardy ivy growing up the north side had already slipped its inquisitive fingers in through the windows of the second story.
She took another deep breath, and glanced around at the rest of the yard. The lush, dew-gleaming lawn needed mowed, the rosebushes flanking the path had twisted and sprawled out of their bounds, and the iron-wrought fence surrounding the whole half-acre needed re-painted. And she didn’t even want to look at the snarled knot that was the vegetable garden on the north side.
She paused, listening. Birds chirped in the motionless boughs of the towering pines and oaks that surrounded and filled her property, but aside from that quiet, cheerful sound, all remained silent. She nearly smiled. So different from the rushing, wailing, flashing, seething streets of Manhattan.
She turned, adjusted the collar of her draping sweater wrap, and strode down the uneven walkway between the rose bushes, her boots tapping on the bricks. She pushed the squeaking iron gate out of the way, turned and opened the door of her dad’s pickup truck—a sturdy, new red Ford that had carried everything of hers up all the winding, sweeping roads from New York to here: an empty house by a tiny town near the Bay of Fundy.
She opened the door and crawled up into the cab—it was like climbing a tree. Her dad had been a lot bigger than her…
She settled, pulled her purse strap over her head and set her purse in the passenger seat, slammed the door, and started the big diesel engine. It grumbled to life as her keys jingled, and she gingerly pulled the truck out into the dirt road, sitting far forward in the seat and steering with just her right hand.
As she drove, the sunlight flashed through the trees and against the left side of her face. Marina rolled the window down, to let the fresh air in. She bit her lip, hoping she could remember the way back into town. She’d driven through it yesterday, late, but it had been in the rain…
She didn’t push the truck faster than twenty five, and she didn’t listen to any music as she maneuvered the road that wound through a canyon of pines, her left hand resting in her lap. She only came to one fork in the road, hesitated for a moment, wincing, then turned right. After a few minutes, though, she breathed a sigh. Here it was.
Marina doubted this little town appeared on most maps. But it had a medium-sized, stone post office that she could see from here, a wide, sunlit main street lined with a few quaint shops, a two-pump gas station, and a general store at the far end that she hoped would have what she needed.
She pulled up in front of the broad-windowed, brick general store and parked, then opened the door and slid down out of the truck. Her boots crunched on the gravel as she stepped up onto the sidewalk. She glanced to the right and realized that the store snugged up right next to what was probably the only restaurant in town—a white, pleasant little deli with the name Theresa’s painted in curly writing on the window—and the hanging sign said Closed.
Marina pushed the door of the general store open. A bell jangled over her head. She eased inside and let the door click shut behind her.
The shop was small, dimly-lit, and packed with rows of loaded standing shelves. White and maroon checked tiles made up the floor, and jars of old-fashioned candy almost covered the cashier’s counter off to her far left.
Before she had taken three steps, a middle-aged man in a plaid shirt and jeans stepped out from behind one of the back shelves.
“’Morning,” he greeted her, smiling. “Can I help you find anything?”
“Um,” Marina adjusted her purse strap on her shoulder and glanced around. “Paint?”
“Interior or exterior?” he asked, coming closer.
“Exterior,” she answered. “I’m painting my window frames.”  
“It’s a nice day for that,” he commented. “Yeah, come this way.” He beckoned, then started back the way he had come. Marina followed him.
“Is there a specific color you’re looking for?”
“They used to be deep green,” Marina said. “Almost all the paint is gone now, but I think that’s right—some sort of pine green.”
The storekeeper paused and glanced back at her, brow furrowed.
“Which house are you painting?” he wondered. “I’ve sold paint to pretty much everybody in this town, and there’s nobody with pine green windows.”
Marina almost smiled.
“I’m new in town—just moved in yesterday,” she said. “I bought the Stellan house.”
The storekeeper, now standing in front of a rainbow of paint swatches on the wall, stopped and looked at her.
“You mean…” He raised his eyebrows. “You mean that old, Danish-looking house on the edge of town?” he pointed. “The one where that author lived for all those years before he went out into the forest and…”
“Yeah,” Marina nodded, then shrugged, smiling. “What can I say? It was cheap.”
He laughed, then turned to search the swatches.
“Ghosts don’t bother you, huh?”
“No such thing,” Marina said quietly, the smile fading from her face.
“Tell that to the people around here,” the shopkeeper answered, reaching up to pull a couple swatches off the wall. “Especially after most of us have seen or heard more than one weird thing in those woods.” He turned and gave her a pointed look. “Word to the wise: don’t go out there at night. No matter what you think you see.”
Marina frowned at him, alarmed, but he was perfectly serious, so she nodded once. He faced the swatches again, and pulled down one more, then handed them to her with another smile.
“Feel free to take these home and see how they look.”
“I think I’ll actually pick one out now, if you’ll give me a minute,” Marina said, taking them from him.
“Okay, sure,” he nodded. “Take your time. I’ll just be up here organizing some stuff by the counter.”
“All right,” Marina said, and he left her alone in the aisle with three swatches of green. Marina watched him go, her brow slowly furrowing as she rubbed her thumb up and down the pieces of paper.
The overhead radio clicked on, playing oldies. She blinked, and forced herself to look down at the different shades.
After ten minutes of debate, she decided, and took the swatch up to the counter. The shopkeeper eagerly mixed the paint for her, then helped her load up a basket of other supplies she would need, such as paint stirrers, brushes, and scrapers. She bought two gallons of dark green paint, all the other supplies, and a glass bottle of soda, and hauled all of her purchases to the front door. Two bags she carried in the crook of her left elbow, and the other two in her right hand. She heaved the door open. The bell jangled.
“Need help?” the shopkeeper called from behind the counter. Marina shook her head.
“No, thanks. I’ve got it.”
“Okay,” he answered. “Nice to meet you, Miss…?”
“Feroe,” she answered, slipping out. “Marina Feroe.”
“Jim Fields,” he replied. “Have a good day!”
“Thanks,” Marina said, letting the door shut.
A crisp gust of wind blew through her clothes and hair as soon as she stepped down off the sidewalk, and she fumbled in her purse for her keys. She managed to dig them out, bite the side of her cheek and use the keyless entry to unlock the truck. It beeped. Grunting, she heaved the door open and swung her right hand bags up onto the passenger seat.
The bags on her other arm slipped.
She gasped. She scrambled to catch them, scrabbling around her swaying purse—          
Her left hand wouldn’t obey.
One bag slipped and smashed onto the ground.
Her soda bottle shattered.
She wanted to scream something foul. Instead, she gritted her teeth hard, threw the remaining bag up into the truck, and got down to pick up the bag of paint brushes that was now filled with soda.
“Wait, wait—careful!” a voice called out. “Don’t cut yourself.”
She jerked, startled, and glanced up. At first, all she saw was a pair of work boots and jeans—then she saw the rest of him.
He wore a long-sleeved, blue shirt stained with dirt, as if he’d been working in a garden. He had collar-length blonde hair that lit up like gold in the sunlight. He hurried toward her, his boots thudding on the paving. Her face heated and she looked back down at the mess.
“I won’t,” she mumbled. “I’m just…stupid…” She twisted her left arm and pulled it toward herself, cursing her useless fingers. She reached out with her good hand and pulled the plastic back, trying to fish the brushes out.
“Wait a second—stop,” he urged—his voice sounded like an afternoon wind, warm and deep. It brought her head up again…
And she froze. He knelt right across from her, startlingly near. His face was flawless—pale but ruddy, with soft, strong features and jaw line. His fine hair hung like flax around his brow and ears, and his quiet mouth formed a small smile. But she saw all of this peripherally—for Marina was instantly captured by his eyes.
They were the color of the highest summer sky—pure blue, and brilliant as jewels, and fathomless. His dark right eyebrow quirked, and his smile broadened. He glanced down at the mess. His brown eyelashes were as long as a girl’s.
“I can get those,” he assured her, reaching down with both dirt-covered hands and swiftly pulling the brushes free of the tinkling glass. Marina’s mouth opened to protest, but nothing came out. Her face got even hotter.
“Here,” he said, holding the brushes out to her and giving her another bright grin. She managed to take them from him, and then he scooped the bag up and stood. Marina’s eyebrows raised. He was tall, his shoulders broad. He trotted over to a metal trash can and tossed the mess in. It clanged when it hit the bottom. Marina got to her feet, then realized she was staring at him. She turned quickly, leaned into the truck and stuffed the now-sticky brushes into the cup holder.
“Planning a project?” he asked, and she heard him come back toward her. She turned back around, wishing she wasn’t blushing so hard.
“Yeah,” she nodded, glancing up at him. He dusted his palms off on his jeans, his friendly look remaining.
“I’m painting some windows,” she added, shrugging, still keeping her arm close. He stuck his hands in his pockets and cocked his head.
“That’s a big job. Need any help?”
Marina’s eyes flashed and she frowned at him. He suddenly laughed.
“I’ve forgotten my manners,” he said. “My name is Bird Oldeson. I’m kind of the town’s handyman.” He met her eyes again, and inclined his head.
“Oh, I see,” Marina nodded. Absently, she noted that he had an accent—it sounded almost English, but with a gentle lilt that she couldn’t identify. She held out her right hand.
“Marina Feroe,” she said. “I just moved here.”
He gave her a look of startled pleasure, then took up her hand in a gentle hold. His fingers were warm.
“Nice to meet you,” he said. Marina allowed herself a little smile.
“Nice to meet you, too,” she answered. Then, she turned and climbed up into the truck.
“I meant what I asked you,” he said as she shut the door.
“What?” she asked, glancing out the open window as she turned the truck on.
“If you need any help.” He wasn’t really smiling now—he gazed at her with raised eyebrows. She shook her head.
“No, I think I’m okay,” she said. “Thank you, though.”
“You’re sure?” he pressed, his voice quieter. Marina paused, studying him, then nodded again.
“Yes,” she said. “But really—thank you.”
He gave her a half smile, then bowed his head again.
“I’m sure I will see you again.”
She didn’t know what to say to that, so she broadened her smile a little, then put the truck in reverse, pulled out and headed back alone to her old house.
   Marina leaned the shaky ladder up against the north wall of the house. It rattled as it hit the sunlit siding. She took the heavy clippers in her hand and gazed straight up. Before she did anything with the paint, she had to get the ivy off the windows of the second story. Which was going to be tricky.
She clamped the handle of the clippers between her teeth, grabbed one of the rungs of the ladder and set her feet. Then, taking a breath, she started to climb, only occasionally using her left hand for balance. Once she reached the top, she wrapped her left arm around the ladder, took the clippers in her hand and began snapping at the ivy.
The long tendrils fell down in waves, but more and more lay beneath, like a thick carpet. Her arm got sore, and the ladder wobbled, but she worked for several hours without stopping.
Finally, her shoulder couldn’t take it anymore, and she sighed, wiped the sweat off her forehead, and started down.
She gathered up the trimmed ivy and hauled it around to the sagging mulch pile near the garden. Then, she came back around, put her hand on her narrow hip and gazed up…
To see that it hardly looked like she’d done anything. She gritted her teeth, frowned fiercely at the remaining ivy, snatched the clippers up from the grass and started up the ladder again.
   Marina thrashed. Her sleeping bag tore. She jerked awake, sweating, her heart hammering. She stared at the dark ceiling of the study.
Jerking gasps caught in her chest and she shivered all over. Weakly, she lifted her head and glanced through the door. Gray light of dawn seeped in through the sitting room windows. She swallowed and eased her head back down onto her crooked pillow—and grimaced.
Clenching pain ran up and down her left side and shot through her shoulder, down her arm, twisted through her elbow and clamped down on her wrist. Her arm shuddered, and she pulled it against her chest. Her whole back ached, and she felt like she had a fever.
For an hour, she lay there, breathing deeply, forcing her muscles to loosen, mentally kicking herself. She’d overdone it today. She should have stopped after tearing the whole wall of ivy down, and not tried to tackle the rosebushes by the front walk. She’d known that when she started that last job, but she hadn’t listened to herself. Now she was paying for it.
Tears leaked out and ran down her temples. She knew what it was like to wake up fully rested, without any pain. But she couldn’t remember the last time she had.
And the last time it hurt this much had been about a month after it happened.
She sat up, groaning and gritting her teeth, squeezing her eyes shut. She stayed still a moment, regulating her breathing, trying to stop shivering. Then, she pushed her sleeping bag off herself and crawled to her feet. The ruffle of her long white nightgown tumbled to her ankles. She wrapped her arms around herself, chilled.
“Such an idiot, Marina…” she muttered. She crossed the rug and left the study, turned down the hall and fumbled with the lock on the front door. If she could just get some fresh air, the ache in her head might go away, at least…
She pulled the thick, heavy black door open. Its hinges squeaked.
Fresh air gushed in to meet her, and she closed her eyes and took a deep breath, letting the door go as it swung further open. She stepped up and leaned sideways against the wide doorframe, letting the breeze cool her hot forehead. Sighing, she finally opened her eyes, and gazed out at her gray front yard, hung with early-morning shadow. She lingered on the ragged rose bushes, whose branches still hung wild, disordered and tangled all over the other flower beds and the path.
Then, she caught sight of something on her front step. Frowning, she shuffled out, bent with a wince, and picked it up.
She fingered the flimsy sheets of a small newspaper of ads and coupons. Her mouth quirked as she straightened. The people in her new town didn’t waste any time trying to sell things to her…
Her eyes focused on the front page. She frowned.
Right in the middle sat an ad for Svenson’s Plumbing, Carpentry and Landscaping—and it listed its employees: Richard Smith, Harry Williams, and Bird Oldeson.
Marina absently pulled her left arm against her stomach, and stared at the name as her unsteady hand held the paper. Then, she clenched her jaw, muttered a Danish curse word under her breath, and turned and went back inside to find a light, hoping the ad listed Svenson’s hours.
  Chapter Three
   With each lap she made around the house, the aching in her muscles eased, and her left side relaxed. She wandered through the green, sunlit lawn, following a crooked brick path that led her between the overgrown rows of herbs, and beneath a leaning arbor laden with grape vines. Her heels tapped on the dull stone as she passed into the deep shadow behind the house, cast by three towering oaks. She glanced over the half-sunken benches and toppled bird bath, all swallowed by vines and weeds. A little robin alighted on the back of one of the benches and cocked his head at her. She paused, and watched his bright eyes. He chirped once, then fluttered up and away, darting into the forest and out of sight.
A chilly gust of wind issued from the reaches of the woods, and rustled through her hair and clothes and the boughs of the trees. She wrapped her arms around herself and narrowed her eyes at the deep, tangled green shadow beyond the benches, the line of pines and the sagging wrought iron fence. She turned, and resumed her walk.
On the other side of the house, she came again to the rose garden, all in disarray. Many bloomed—red, white, peach and maroon—but they snarled together like an evil fairy’s curse. One rosebush in particular made her frown: it bore no buds, and it leaned menacingly up against the house very close to the sitting-room window, just as the ivy had done on the opposite side. She paused and stepped closer to the plant, glancing it up and down. Thick, wicked thorns covered all its branches, and even its leaves. It needed to be cut back, or torn out—but she was afraid it would slice her to shreds if she tried.
Far off, a low rumbling arose through the silence, obscuring the twittering of the birds. Marina’s head came up, and she listened. Then, she took a breath and braced herself, and started back around to the front of the house. She picked through the border garden, kicked at a large weed, and halted in front of the steps, her arms still folded, gazing toward the road, toward town, at the approaching pickup truck.
The truck’s brown paint gleamed in the brilliant sun, and shovels, ladders and other tools rattled around in the bed. It pulled up in her driveway next to her own truck, and the throbbing engine cut out. The next moment, the door creaked open, and the tall, winsome form of Bird Oldeson hopped out onto the gravel.
He wore a tan t-shirt, worn jeans and boots, and gave her a smile that lit the day up even brighter. She reflexively returned it.
“Beautiful morning, isn’t it?” he called, striding toward her, his vivid blue eyes glancing all around at the sky, then the gardens and trees, as the light made a halo of his hair.
“Yes,” she nodded. “I think the rain did some good.”
“Oh, always,” he grinned, coming up to stop in front of her. He held out his hand. “Good to see you again, Miss Feroe.”
“Thanks,” she nodded, and barely took hold of his fingers. She let go right away, blushing, but he didn’t act like he noticed. He stuck both hands in his pockets, then looked her house up and down.
“Well, what is it you need done?” he asked, then met her eyes. She smiled crookedly and glanced behind her.
“The question is,” she said. “What do I not need done.”
He laughed. The ringing sound made the birds flutter.
“All right, let me rephrase,” he amended. “What do you need done first?”
“Well…” she sighed, frowning as she studied her house, then faced him again. “The windows. They leaked during the thunderstorm. The rest of the stuff in the garden can wait a while, but I don’t want my furniture ruined if it decides to rain again soon.”
“All right,” he said, scrubbing a hand through his hair as his brow furrowed. “You have the paint already, I assume—but the windows will probably need sealed, maybe even adjusted, since they’ve gotten crooked as the house shifts.”
“Okay, do whatever you need to do.” Marina folded her arms and cocked her head. “Are you paid by the hour?”
“Yes.”
“All right, go ahead,” she gestured toward the house. “Bring me any paperwork or questions or whatever—I’ll just be down here, trying to get this rose garden under control.”
He nodded again, catching her eye and giving her a soft, bright smile that warmed her to her core.
“I’ll get started right now,” he said, and turned and strode back to his truck, his boots crunching on the sand. Suppressing her own smile, Marina faced the house again and headed back toward the roses.
  All day, Marina sat on a short stool with her back to the sun, letting it warm her, as she cut the overgrown roses back away from the path with a set of sturdy clippers. She had managed to find her work gloves, so she was able to thrust her hand into the thorny mess without tearing up her skin—though working with her left hand remained a challenge. Her long braid hung over her shoulder, and her jeans and loose shirt got dirty, but she didn’t care. Birds crooned and twittered in the bushes and in the branches of the bordering trees, and a quiet wind rustled the leaves.
Behind and above her, Bird Oldeson perched on a ladder, leaning up against the front of the house. His hammer clacked, the wood of the window frame creaked as he pried and pulled, and the ladder rungs squeaked with each step as he effortlessly ascended or descended to resume or go get a tool. She didn’t look at him—she just listened to the patter and tap of his rhythms, and the thud of his footsteps.
When she had gotten halfway down the row of roses, she paused a moment, sat back and winced at her stiff muscles, then wiped the sweat from her forehead with the back of her sleeve. Bird’s hammer tapped three times, rapidly. Then, he began to hum.
She froze, then twisted on her stool and glanced up at him.
The sunlight caught half of him as he leaned against the ladder and the wall, deepening the color of his clothes and skin, and blazing against his hair. His hands moved swiftly, deftly, over the loose windowsill as he secured it. He held two nails between his lips, his attention fixed on his work. And he hummed a soft, strange tune that carried through the midmorning air like a breeze.
For a long moment, Marina didn’t move or even breathe as she listened, studying the way he moved, trying to remember if she had heard the song before. He used one nail, then the other, and then with his liberated mouth, he began to sing, quietly. She blinked. It was another language—something like Swedish or Danish…But she couldn’t tell.
Then he paused, turned his head and looked down at her.
For a moment, her eyes locked with his, and she saw nothing but the shade of the sky. Then he smiled, and Marina’s face flooded with heat. She quickly turned back around and began hacking at the bushes with a vengeance. For a few moments, he was silent behind her, and her blush started to hurt.
His hammer tap-tap-tapped again. He resumed his lilting hum. And she let herself start breathing—but she did not let herself turn around and stare at him any more.
   “Ow! Crap!” Marina hissed, jerking her hand back and shaking it out, then prying her glove off. She sucked in air through her teeth as she rested her right hand on top of her left, watching a long line of blood bloom from her wrist to her forefinger knuckle.
A thud issued from around the corner of the house. Then, Bird came striding around into the shade, his brow furrowed, his eyes finding her hand.
“What happened?”
“Oh, this stupid rosebush,” Marina halfway gestured to the gnarled old plant leaning against the house. “It bit me.”
Bird put his hands on his hips and studied her, then the rosebush.
“What were you trying to do?”
“I want to cut it down and then pull it out,” she answered, wincing at the sting that darted up and down her hand now. Bird glanced at her, startled.
“Why?” he asked.
“Look at it. It’s not blooming, and it doesn’t look like it’s planning to,” she answered. “Plus, I think it’s trying to climb into my window.”
He shook his head.
“I think you have the wrong idea.”
She frowned at him.
“What do you mean?”
He knelt down in front of it, and reached out toward its thick, wicked branches. Marina flinched back…
But he didn’t recoil. Instead, he gingerly moved the branches, feeling them, studying their form. Then, he turned, and picked up her clippers from the grass, and began strategically cutting at the small, withered branches.
“This bush is a different kind from the ones along your walkway,” he explained quietly as he clipped. “Those were bought in this part of the country—they were bred for this weather. But this one…” he paused, and pulled a few dead leaves off and flicked them aside. “This is from somewhere else entirely. A different climate, different soil. Picked up on some faraway travels, I suppose. And see, it’s a climbing rose, and those are not.” He gestured back to the others. The pain of Marina’s wound faded as she watched him, measuring what he said.
“It’s had to survive far harsher winters than it was meant for, and a lot less sunlight than it needed,” he went on. “But it did what it had to in order to survive—it leaned up against the house, near the fireplace here, see? The warmth and shelter of the house has kept it alive. And the one who built the house was wise enough to plant this bush on the south side, away from the brutal north wind—and that same person nursed it and fought off frost and bugs for probably twenty or thirty years before the bush got strong enough to fend for itself. But it wouldn’t leave the house then, even though it could.” He sat back on his haunches, his arms unbloodied, even though he had been elbow deep in the teeth of that bush. Bird glanced up at Marina, holding her still with his gaze.
“It’s a late bloomer,” he said, giving her a crooked smile. “But I think, if you’ll have a little patience with its difficult attitude, it might turn out to be the prettiest rose you’ve got.”
Marina looked at him for a moment, marveling at the way his speech flowed from practical to decorous, and how he talked about the rosebush as if it were a person.
“Okay,” she found herself saying, answering his smile. “I’ll see if I can keep from killing it.”
He grinned, and stood up, then stepped closer and eyed her cut.
“Are you all right?”
“I’m fine,” she answered, nodding. “I’ll just go clean it up.”
“Are you sure? It looks like it hurts,” he said, watching her face.
“Ha,” she laughed, a bitter gall rising in her throat. “Believe me, I’ve had a lot worse.”
His brow tightened and concern lit up his eyes. She forced a smile and stepped around him, heading for the house. And as she pushed open the door, she almost swore she heard him murmur something soothing to that rosebush—but she couldn’t understand a word.    
  Chapter Four
 “There you go—what do you think?” Bird asked breathlessly as he hopped down from the third rung of the ladder and trotted across the grass over to her. Marina stood up from her garden stool and dusted her hand off on her jeans, then reached up and adjusted the crooked chain of the necklace that hid under her collar. She shot him a startled look.
“Are you finished already?” she asked. “It’s only been two days!”
“Yep,” he said triumphantly, folding his strong arms and facing the house. Marina glanced past him and up, and let her eyes wander over all of the now-perfect-and-painted windows.
“Looks great,” she nodded. “Very pretty.”
“Good,” he nodded. He heaved a deep breath. “That means I have time for that herb garden.”
Marina blinked.
“The what?”
He strode around the house, past the bushes and toward the side of her vegetable garden.
“Your herb garden,” he repeated. “You’ve got a lot of stuff growing—asparagus, rhubarb, spearmint, dill, garlic…You just can’t see them because of all the weeds.”
Marina frowned, dropping the clippers from her left hand into the dirt and following him.
“But I…” she tried, blushing in spite of herself. “I…I can’t pay you for—I mean, I can’t afford—”
“Don’t worry about it,” he waved her off as he paused in front of a small section of earth that had been plotted out with now half-buried bricks. “My work day just ended a few minutes ago, and the rhubarb has been crying to me all afternoon.” He glanced over his shoulder at her and flashed a grin. She paused, and raised a sardonic eyebrow.
“Crying to you,” she said flatly.
“Well, maybe crying is the wrong word,” he shrugged one shoulder.
“Probably ‘sweetly requesting’ would be better. I could say the same thing about the asparagus, just take the ‘sweet’ part out—asparagus get all stuffy-acting when they’re asking favors.” He turned back toward the garden. “The spearmint I just had to ignore—they’re pushy and overpowering, as you know, unless you keep them at a distance. I can personally only take them in small doses. And the dill is just plain saucy about it, and the garlic is downright loud, making a lot more fuss than the situation actually warrants, so you see…”
Marina was already grinning and shaking her head too hard to hear the rest, and he trailed off, grinning at her. She calmed down, pressing the back of her wrist to her mouth, hiding her smile.
“So you see,” he finished. “They’re all whining about the weed situation.” He canted his head. “Want to help me get them to shut up?”
“Sure,” Marina shrugged helplessly and beamed. “Can’t have my herbs complaining, can I?”
  “Is this really how you like to spend your Saturdays?”
Bird glanced up at her over the tall stalks and green leaves of the white lilies. He then continued to pull up weeds from between the feet of the elegant flowers and toss them to the side. His arms were dirty up to the elbows, as were the knees of his jeans, and he had a smear of dirt across his forehead.
“Look who’s talking,” he answered, then sent her a twinkling glance. Marina chuckled, and sat back on her stool. She peeled off her work gloves and tried not to wince as the worn leather came loose of her left hand, then brushed a strand of hair out of her face.
“You’ve been done with the house for a week now,” she pointed out. “But you keep coming back to work in this garden in the afternoons, even though I’m not paying you, and now you’re here on a Saturday—”
“Would you like me to leave?”
Marina stopped. He met her eyes, perfectly serious, his eyebrows raised.
“No!” she said quickly, sitting up straight. Her face heated up—again, and she stammered. “I mean…No, I’m not telling you to leave. In fact, I like…I mean, I appreciate…” she pulled her arm toward her, then swallowed. “I was just wondering why—”
“You have one of the best gardens I’ve ever seen,” Bird interrupted seamlessly, still weeding. “And one of the oldest. I know you want to fix all this up, make it look nice—but that’s a lot of work. Lucky for you, I love getting my hands covered with dirt.” He tossed a dandelion over his shoulder. “Plus, you just moved here, and you don’t know anybody.” He sat up, and dusted his hands off. He looked at her squarely, then gave her a quiet smile. “And I won’t let anybody sit alone in a great big house if she looks like she needs some company.”
For a moment, she just gazed back at him, her cheeks still flushed—but a soft glow guttered to life in her chest.
“Really?” she murmured.
His eyes flickered.
For just an instant, she almost frowned. Then, his expression cleared, and he nodded. She ducked her head, smiling again, and shrugged.
“Well…” she managed. “Thanks.”
He was silent for a second. Then, he cleared his throat.
“’course, I may have to say something about the weird color of green that you picked to frame the door…”
She threw a clod of dirt at him. He ducked, laughing.
They continued working in companionable silence, and so the heat in her face faded—but the warmth deep inside her did not.
  “How’s work today?” Marina asked, taking a long sip of her cherry limeade, then pushing aside the remnants of her sandwich wrappings and leaning back in the red-padded diner chair. She canted her head at Bird, who sat across from her at the tiny two-person table right next to the sunlit ceiling-to-floor front window of Theresa’s.
“Busy this morning,” he admitted, his brow furrowing as he poured more catsup out onto his fries. “Mr. Petrson cut down a line of oaks by his driveway—we had to pull out the stumps.”
Marina studied him. He sullenly clenched his jaw.
“You all right?” she asked.
He shook his head, still not looking up.
“It’s the oaks.”
“What about them?”
“They were healthy,” he said, putting the catsup down with more than necessary force. His jaw tightened. “There was nothing wrong with them. And they had to be at least a hundred years old.”
Marina frowned.
“Why did he cut them down, then?”
He shrugged.
“Don’t know. Didn’t like them blocking the view of the bay, I guess,” he muttered. He shoved his food basket away and sat back abruptly, crossing his arms and looking out the window. He huffed, and shook his head.
“What right does Petrson have to take them down?” He ground his teeth. “A century they’ve survived, through ice and snow and drought—and he fells them in one afternoon. They’re his elders. He should have some respect.”
They went silent. Marina bit her lip, and glanced outside at the empty main street. Bird stayed petulantly quiet. Marina hooked her thumb through the necklace at her throat and pulled the chain out of her collar, and fingered the pendant. She glanced at him—he still stared out the window.
“I was thinking of planting an oak off to the side of my house,” she said, tilting her head, and glancing back at him.
He looked at her out of the corner of his eye, his mouth still tight. Then, the hardness in his face melted into warmth, and he smiled.
“I can probably get you a good deal on a sapling,” he said.
“Good,” she smiled at him, the weight of his mood lifting off her like clouds opening up to the sun. She sat forward. “Actually, I—”
“What’s that?”
Marina halted. Bird’s bright blue eyes had sharpened in a keen stare at her—no, at her necklace.
“Oh, uh—this?” Her brow furrowed and she glanced down at the pendant. Something lodged in her throat. She had to fight for a moment to find her voice again. “My…My dad gave it to me. It’s—”
“Mjollnir,” he finished, his eyes still fixed on it. Marina’s eyebrows shot up.
“You…You know what this is?”
“Sure I do,” he nodded. “Could I…?”
Before he could finish his question, or she could answer it, he had reached out and taken hold of her pendant. Their fingers brushed. She gasped, and almost jerked back—then stopped herself to keep from pulling it out of his grasp.
She held very still as he leaned forward, until their heads were not six inches apart. His forehead tightened and his eyes narrowed as he held the pendant with his first two fingers and his thumb. Marina risked a glance down at it—it was a decorative interpretation of Thor’s hammer, made of silver, slightly tarnished.
“The designs on it are beautiful—very delicate,” he observed quietly. “Is it an antique?”
“I think so,” Marina answered, unable to summon much volume with him so close. “But I can’t remember. I’ve worn it for several years.”
He didn’t answer—just ran his thumb over the “T” portion of the hammer.
“You’re…” she ventured. “You’re interested in old Norse myths?”
He halfway smiled.
“Ever since I was born.” He lifted his bright eyes to hers. “Are you? Or was this just a present?”
“No, I…” she started, her heartbeat starting to pound in her throat. “I mean, my dad and I are Old Norse scholars. Well, I…I am. My dad…was.”
He raised his eyebrows.
“Scholars?” he repeated, mercifully leaving the subject of her father alone. “In what capacity?”
“Archaeology, mostly,” she said, absently realizing that he still had hold of her pendant, and had not leaned back. “And…And literature. Dad collected manuscripts and antique books.”
“Really?” he sounded pleased, astonished.
“Yeah,” Marina answered, surprised.
A slow smile bloomed on his face.
“Would you...I mean, could I see them?”
“Um…” she swallowed hard, but she couldn’t think clearly at all with his fingers just inches from her face. “Sure—?”
“I mean, I won’t if you don’t want me to,” he said hastily. “I just think all that stuff is so—”
“No, it’s okay,” she cut in. “Sure. Sure, you can see it,” she nodded, finally realizing that she meant it. She smiled at him. “Would this evening work?”
He dropped her pendant and leaned back, grinning.
“I’ll be there with bells on.”
  “What a fantastic library,” Bird remarked quietly as he stepped through the door, his tea cup in hand, and slowly gazed from one corner of the room to the other.
“Thanks,” Marina said, following him in. It was still halfway light outside, but since there were no windows in the library, so it was dark except for the standing lamp, the fire in the fireplace, and the candles she’d lit on the mantelpiece. She put her hands in her pockets and shoved a half-full packing box with her toe.
“Sorry about the mess,” she said. “I tried to straighten a little this afternoon, put more stuff up on the shelves, but there’s so much. And, you know, I’ve been outside mostly for the past couple weeks…”
“Sure,” Bird said lightly, stepping further in to study the spines of the books on the far wall. Marina paused by the fireplace, watching him in the gold half light. It was chilly this evening—he wore a dark blue sweater and nice jeans and boots, and he had combed his hair. He seemed softer, stronger—and older, somehow. But more vivid, alive—close. He sent a casual glance over at her, and her heart suspended. He smiled.
“You sure you have enough shelf space for all this?” he asked, gesturing to the remaining full boxes and taking a sip of tea.
“Ha, I hope so,” Marina smiled crookedly. “I’d hate to leave something homeless.”
He came closer, and leaned over one of the boxes. Then, something in his face changed.
“What are these?”
Marina stepped up next to him and looked down.
“Oh—a few of the artifacts my dad came across on our…on our last dig.” She paused, forcing that familiar, wicked pain back down her throat. She wrapped her arms around her middle and straightened.
Then, Bird bent down and picked one up. Startled, Marina tried to say something to stop him, but nothing came out. He carefully lifted one of the small, squatty stone figures up out of the box, and held it in front of him.
“Loki,” he stated. Marina stared at Bird.
“You recognize him?”
His eyes never left the statue, which he held almost gently.
“Well,” he said quietly. “I recognize that it’s supposed to be him. Being punished by the snake, right?” he glanced at her. For a moment, she thought she saw the skin around his eyes tighten. She nodded.
“I actually think he deserved it, don’t you?” she murmured. “For killing Bauldr?”
He was silent for a long time.
“But that brings Ragnarok, doesn’t it?” he said. “Makes Loki so angry that he wants to destroy everyone and everything.”
“Yes,” Marina said carefully, studying Bird’s profile. “I suppose so.”
For a while, they were quiet. Then, Bird took a low breath.
“Kjóll ferr austan, koma munu Múspells,” he murmured. of lög lýðir, en Loki stýrir; fara fíflmegir með freka allir, þeim er bróðir Býleists í för.
Surtr ferr sunnan með sviga lævi, skínn af sverði sól valtíva; grjótbjörg gnata, en gífr rata, troða halir helveg, en himinn klofnar.”
Marina couldn’t take her eyes from him. The Old Norse words flowed easily from his lips, lilting with his deep voice. When he stopped speaking, she could swear he could hear her heart pounding. But if he did, he didn’t show it—he stared at the statue. So she took a breath of her own.
“O'er the sea from the east there sails a ship,” she translated, hushed. With the people of Muspell, at the helm stands Loki; After the wolf do wild men follow, And with them the brother of Byleist goes.”
Bird turned to look at her, fixing his gaze on her. The firelight flickered against his eyes. She swallowed, but he waited, so she went on.
“Surt fares from the south with the scourge of branches, The sun of the battle-gods shone from his sword; The crags are sundered, the giant-women sink, The dead throng Hel-way, and heaven is cloven.”
She stopped to catch her breath. He watched her.
“You memorized the Edda?”
She lifted her eyebrow.
“You memorized it in Old Norse,” she countered.
He suddenly chuckled.
“Yeah, well…” he bent, and put the Loki statue back. “I’m a geek like that.”
“You’re not a geek,” Marina said quietly. He straightened, and met her eyes. She cleared her throat and looked the other way, hiding her blush yet again.  
She sensed him open his mouth to say something—but then he stopped. She turned, and frowned at him.
He was looking at the framed artifact above the fireplace.
“What’s this?” he whispered, his voice entirely different—enough to make a chill run down her spine. He stepped around her to stand right in front of the mantle. He set his tea down next to one of the candlesticks, then didn’t move.
“I actually found that in the back of an old library when I was fifteen,” Marina explained. “I just thought it was interesting, and so the librarian paid me with it, instead of money, for straightening all his archival shelves.” She came up next to Bird and turned her gaze to the subject of her narrative. It was an old piece of parchment, three feet by three feet, its borders illuminated with ships and sea monsters and intricate, twisting knots. In the center had been drawn, in black ink, a broad stone gate, with an arched top—and in the center of the arch stood a carving of Mjollnir, Thor’s hammer. Through the center of the gate, a great, gnarled tree stood. And all around the gate stood a thick, thorny forest dotted with disembodied eyes—and a few wiry wolves with lolling tongues lurked between the rocks and shrubs.
“Looks frightening,” Bird remarked. “What’s the inscription, there at the bottom?”
“Stien til Asgard,” Marina said. “It means—”
“Gate to Asgard,” Bird finished. She blinked.
“You…You didn’t just memorize the Edda, did you?” she realized. “You know old Norse!”
“Yes,” he nodded absently, then pointed at the drawing. “What did your father have to say about this?”
Marina said nothing for a long moment. It was getting harder and harder to ignore that old pain, that shadow reaching up to smother her.
“He thought it was a real structure,” she managed, taking a deep breath. “Another dig site to investigate—maybe a place for ritual sacrifice or something.” She glanced down at the floor. “He seemed to think it was around here somewhere, actually.”
Bird looked at her sharply.
“He did?”
Marina lifted her head, and nodded.
“Yeah. Which is why I came and bought this house.” She paused, and gazed up at the drawing again. “Of course, neither of us believe it’s the gate to Asgard, but…” she shrugged tightly. “He was interested in it. It was almost enough to…” Her throat closed up, and she couldn’t keep going.
Bird stayed quiet for a long time. She didn’t look at him. Then, he drew himself up, and turned toward her.
“Hey,” he said, his tone easier. “There’s still some light out—want to go see if we can find a good spot for your oak?”
“Yeah,” Marina sucked in a deep breath, blinking tears back and tightening her arms around herself. She forced a smile and a glance in his direction. “Sounds good.”
Read the whole book on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Bauldrs-Tears-Retelling-Lokis-Fate-ebook-dp-B071JM6YCW/dp/B071JM6YCW/ref=mt_kindle?_encoding=UTF8&me=&qid=1572839008
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ambientdinosaur · 7 years
Text
Leaves
Read on: Fanfiction.net | AO3
A soft breeze gently swept over the fields outside of Luna Nova. The leaves of the two young memorial trees rustled slightly. It was an unmistakable sight up on one of the hills in the vast fields. They were growing right next to an old weathered dry stone wall, that was possibly a millennia old by now. In between them there was a simple granite headstone. The spot had undeniably been an important location for the two witches who now rested there. The inscription on the headstone was short and succinct:
Croix Meridies Chariot du Nord A believing heart is your magic
It was a late summer afternoon and the memorial hill was visited by an elderly couple. The two robed, gray-haired ladies were standing in front of the small monument, with arms linked together. Of the two, the slightly taller, silver-haired lady was holding a very elaborate bouquet with various flowers, ready to be placed on this grave.
The two witches resting on this hill had possibly been the two most influential witches to usher in the new era of magic. Their impact couldn’t be understated. Croix, the Italian genius whose research and technology had laid the groundwork for magic to be used ubiquitously. Almost every industry used magic nowadays to achieve things that had previously been impossible or infeasible without her work. However, despite that her influence could be seen everywhere, Croix had remained generally unknown to the public except to researchers and scholars.
Chariot, on the other hand, had been later hailed as a pioneer as Shiny Chariot, for the magical shows from her youth. Countless of people had been inspired by the French witch, and several witches had taken on the mantle as successors to Shiny Chariot through the decades. Some of which Chariot had taught herself while she still had been a teacher at Luna Nova. While her magical shows were remembered fondly by the general public, her true influence was not as obvious; giving people a love for magic. And the two whose hearts she had touched the most were now standing in front of her resting place. The two successors to her dream and the two who had changed the world.
Atsuko and Diana. The two elderly ladies that were now paying their respects to the late witches. The couple had just come to this hill from Luna Nova Academy, a short broom flight away. The two were wearing their regular traveling robes, that they usually wore while out on errands and such. Atsuko was wearing a robe that was cinnabar-coloured with a sash, while Diana wore a light grey robe along with a pale blue, hooded cloak. Though Diana wore the hood down at the moment, letting her flowy, silver-coloured hair be clearly visible. In contrast, Atsuko had her dark grey hair put up into a bun.   
They had decided earlier the same day to meet up at Luna Nova after Diana would finish her headmistress duties for the day, so they could go visit the memorial trees together. While waiting, Atsuko had humoured herself by teasing some of the first-year students at the academy. While she was world famous, nowadays she was mostly known as a name in witches’ history books. This let her pull off various pranks, like pretending she was a substitute teacher who had gotten lost and what not, on the young witches who didn’t immediately recognize who she was. This time, it was not until Diana came down from her office and called Atsuko’s name that the group of perplexed students had put two and two together and realized who the old Asian lady really was. Diana, who had understood what her wife had been up to, scolded Atsuko in front of the embarrassed students, before the elderly couple had gone off to the Luna Nova gardens to collect a bouquet of flowers for the grave.
Atsuko let out a wistful sigh. It had already been four years since Chariot and Croix had passed away, yet it felt like it could have been yesterday to her. Her two former mentors had acted as several roles for her and Diana throughout life. Idols, teachers, colleagues, friends. Even family. The two European witches had regularly appeared for birthday parties and other family gatherings in the Cavendish family. Their presence had been a natural inclusion.
Both of her old teachers had lived well into their onehundredfifties. An unfathomable age for regular humans, but not uncommon for witches. She and Diana were also well on their way to hit the one hundred fifty mark. It was just another year or so until then.
Diana crouched down to place the bouquet in front of the headstone. Atsuko felt nostalgic while looking around the scenery. She knew how important this spot had been to Chariot, as well to Croix. It was a spot that Chariot seemed to return to throughout life, bringing Croix with her. Chariot had discovered this hill as a child and grown fond of it. When she was still a student at Luna Nova, the young plucky red-headed girl had spent several hours practicing spells here, oftentimes dragging along Croix. The withdrawn, older student had at first been annoyed being taken to this place, but had eventually taken a liking to hanging out here as well. Most likely because of Chariot herself. Atsuko knew this not only from what she had been told from her old mentor, she had also seen it for herself in a vision when she had visited the Fountain of Polaris in her youth. Atsuko had seen Chariot as a teenage witch practicing magic from the eyes of another person, which Atsuko much later had realized that it had been a young Croix.
“Open your heart, laugh with me! Arae Aryrha!” Atsuko recalled. It had been long time since she last had thought of the Words of Arcturus. Atsuko smiled, and mused. Perhaps it was at that time in that vision the two young witches had realized how much they appreciated the other’s smile? Atsuko gave a brief glance at her lifelong partner. She knew at least that every laughter and smile Diana had given her was an invaluable treasure, and that Chariot and Croix most definitely had felt the same about each other.
The old witch reminisced further about this small hill in the British countryside. About the picnics the four witches had had here together during the springs with the kids, and eventually the grandkids. About the story how Croix finally had asked Chariot to marry her while on this hill. And now, about how their spirits were resting in peace here.
It had been a solemn, cloudy day, that day in the late spring almost four years ago. Atsuko, Diana and several family members and friends had gathered to say farewell to the old witch couple. A traditional witch funeral was always a bittersweet affair. The funeral was held when the witch being mourned was still alive. It was in itself just the moment a witch of an advanced age chose to pass away. Witches could possibly live into their twohundreds, especially with the breakthroughs in magical medicine in the 21st century. It was just that most witches chose not to, because of either pain or sickness from their advanced age. This kind of peaceful passing had been the norm for witches since times immemorial, however it had become more infeasible and unlikely after the dark ages and the increased fear of witches. But now in a new era of magic, more and more witches were again able to do so the traditional way.
Atsuko had attended several of these funerals during the years, but this was the first where two witches would pass away together. She had never gotten fully accustomed to these ancient funeral rites. Perhaps it was because she had used to view death as something that just happens, that you don’t have any say in? Regardless, she had prepared to one day follow this custom too, because it was what she and her wife wanted. Just like Chariot and Croix, she wanted to be together with Diana, even in death.
The old Japanese lady recalled her old friend, former mentor and childhood idol from that day. Chariot had been weary and exhausted for quite some time, but it still felt like she had a light radiating from her. The same light Atsuko had seen as a child, well over hundred years ago, during that Shiny Chariot show. The light that had inspired her to become a witch herself.
Croix was also visibly tired that day, but also remaining serene as usual. Atsuko knew that her old teacher had not always been as harmonious but she had been a tranquil person ever since she returned with the cure for Wagandea’s pollen. That task had seemed to help her finding the way in her life and a sense of harmony.
Atsuko became aware of an otherworldly sensation that day. Both of her old teachers had seemed detached, as if their spirits were no longer fully connected to their bodies. It was a sensation similar to what she had felt in the presence of witch spirits in the past, such as Woodward the Blue Moon Spirit or Beatrix the Affectionate. It was a grim reminder that they were indeed passing away, but Atsuko was already well aware of it.
Witches were daughters of the world tree Yggdrasil after all, and when they die they return as one, a slumbering tree spirit. These dormant spirits had developed different names around the world; dryads, hulder, kodama and so forth. It was all folklore that was based on the same thing, witches becoming spirits. According to the most ancient legends, the wood spirits born from the world tree had taught the first witches how to use magic, and in exchange the witches would become spirits as well when they pass away. A bittersweet comfort, Atsuko thought, knowing that no witch truly left this world. A witch spirit may awaken from their slumber if need be. So even after saying farewell that day, they would likely meet again. However, Atsuko worried that she might pass away as well before that would happen.
It had been a quiet and somber process, after the different attendants had said their farewells to the two old witches. The two witches had positioned themselves in their desired spots, and then had been clasping each other’s hands while waiting. They were silent, the two didn’t need to say anything to the other. The two elderly witches had simply looked deeply in each other’s eyes during their final moments. They had planned it all beforehand, and had likely rehearsed the process before. Their wearied bodies slowly faded away as green wisps of magic, ascending into the skies. They smiled, and faced the attendants one last time.     “Never forget, a believing heart is your magic!” The two legendary witches recited in unison, what would be their final words. Croix and Chariot had then returned to look each other in the eyes, and gave each other a final, heartwarming smile. Their smile lasted until they had faded away completely and had left two young tree saplings that were in full bloom in their place. Atsuko and Diana had embraced each other the whole time, and could no longer hold back the tears. They rested their heads on each other, trying to comfort the other. The two old ladies had then been joined by their two, elderly daughters in the embrace and the four of them were hugging each other for a long while, letting them all cry to their heart’s content.
The old Japanese woman looked up at the swaying leaves of the two trees. They had grown quite a bit since that day, but they were still rather young and small. Every time she had gone here since their passing, she had tried to sense either of the tree spirits, but it seemed that they were still slumbering too heavily. She may have heard a whisper once or twice, but if she had, they had been so faint she could have just as easily mixed them up with her own thoughts.
Atsuko turned her gaze to her wife once again. Diana was still crouched down in front of the grave, seemingly reminiscing in silence as well like Atsuko was doing. Atsuko wondered what her elderly wife might have been thinking back on, though she was pretty sure she already knew the answer. Something that always had mattered a lot for Diana: family.
Diana Cavendish. The longest sitting matron of the House of Cavendish since its founder, Beatrix the Affectionate. An impressive feat, but it had been her biggest fear in her younger days that she would be the last head of the family. She had been the only heir to the family, other than her aunt and her cousins. However, her aunt had had no interest on carrying the family’s legacy, and had instead been ready to dissolve the dynasty. This had left Diana the only one of the family with the burden of keeping it alive.
It had not surprised Atsuko that the happiest she had seen her wife, had been when their two daughters were born. The two new witch moms had been overcome with joy, love and relief, especially so for Diana. Diana had put all her heart working towards the revival of her family, and that it would be together with Atsuko.
Their two daughters were now almost one hundred twenty years old and almost indistinguishable in age when compared to their mothers. It was strange how she still could see them as her small children, Atsuko thought to herself. They were just old grandmas like herself! The Japanese lady smiled amused.
As a matter of fact, Atsuko and Diana had become old enough to be grand-grand-grand-grandmas. It sounded silly to be called that, and it was certainly not something that Atsuko had expected in her youth that she would become. At this stage she just prefered to be called Obāsan by all the “younger” members of the Cavendish family, to prevent to be confused with Diana or anyone else of the older members of the family. She actually struggled a bit to keep track of all the family members nowadays, and her sometimes spotty memory had certainly not gotten better with age. However, helping taking care of each new generation in the family had been one of the greatest sources of happiness in her life. Atsuko had always enjoyed to be around children. Playing with the kids or telling grand stories from her past had been a delight every time to her. And ever since Atsuko had stopped traveling around the world working as an ambassador for magic, her main pastime had been spending her time with the family.
Her British wife had been much the same. One of Diana’s greatest joys in life had been telling the history of the Cavendish family and teaching their ancient magics to each new member of the family throughout the years. As the current headmistress of Luna Nova and one of the leading researchers in magical medicine in the past, Diana had been a very busy woman through her life. However, she had never neglected her family despite that. She would always appear for important events like birthday parties and graduations. Or like one of their grandkids’ first magic show. This might have made some co-workers think she was inflexible and hard to work with, but those who knew of her past and her family situation had found her dedication to her family very endearing.
Diana had succeeded with one of her grandest goals in life, to restore her family. And how! She had witnessed close to five generations of the Cavendish family after her, many of them renowned and capable witches themselves like Diana and Atsuko. It was impossible to not tell how proud Diana Cavendish was of her family, and how much they all meant to her.
Similarly, it was also obvious to see how proud Atsuko was of her accomplished and affectionate wife. Atsuko continued to quietly admire her life partner. She got a quick glance of the profile of Diana’s face. Despite her age, there was something ethereal about Diana’s appearance. It was as if magic itself was emanating from her. Atsuko had thought this for the longest time, and had gotten more aware of this feeling as she had gotten older. In contrast, when thinking about her own appearance, Atsuko saw herself more like a dried wooden figurine. Atsuko had mentioned it on occasion, but Diana had always told her that this thought was downright nonsense.
The leaves shook once again in the wind. Atsuko let out another sigh, just as filled with melancholy as before.   “I miss them so very much, Diana” Atsuko said mournfully, breaking the silence the two had had since they arrived on the hill. Diana rose up again, with a heavy huff as she did. She went towards Atsuko and held her wife’s hand.   “We all do, love.” Diana replied, trying to reassure her partner. “The world misses them.”   “I know, but.. I must say.. Our friends really are such sleepyheads!” Atsuko made a frustrated pout, shifting the mood a bit. “They’ve all said that we might meet again, yet none of them have awakened so far.” Despite being almost one hundred fifty years old, Atsuko had still retained some childish traits through life. Some things never changed.   “If there is anything I have learned about spirits, is that they are very capricious.” Diana tried to explain. “They simply do not sense the world in the same way humans do. Time has little meaning to them.” Despite both Atsuko and Diana had attended several witch funerals throughout life, they had yet to witness any friend or acquaintance’s spirit awaken.    “It’s just that.. I still can’t help but feel a bit lost without them.” Atsuko continued pensively, going back to a more blue mood. “If it wasn’t for you, dear, or the family, I wouldn’t know what I would be doing. Would I’ve found something to do anyway without you? Where would I even be?” Atsuko had never really been one for any deeper existential thoughts, preferring to live in the moment as it was. However, these thoughts were becoming increasingly more inevitable with her advanced age.    “Thank goodness you do have us, then.” Diana smiled warmly at her worrying wife. Atsuko returned the smile, and gave the old noblewoman a peck on the cheek.
The two ladies were holding hands, and slightly leaned against each other. Atsuko rested her head against her wife’s shoulder, cushioned by the fabric of the cloak. The horizon had started to become filled with orange hues.   “We should get home soon, love.” Diana “We do not want to be late for dinner at our own house.”   “I know, I know. My stomach is already looking forward to it!” Atsuko grinned, and demonstrated by patting her belly. “I can’t wait to see what our grandkids have cooked up. Just give me a minute before we get onto our brooms.” Atsuko eyed the headstone for a short moment. She had insisted that she would be the one to carve the inscription on it, and had managed to convince everyone rather quickly. If there was a last thing she could do for Chariot and Croix, it would be this, she had reasoned back then. The Japanese lady had not had much experience carving granite, but the end result had turned out to be to everyone’s liking. The inscription was concise, but heartfelt, reflecting Atsuko’s approach to things in life.   “A believing heart is your magic..” Atsuko mumbled thoughtfully. How many times had she heard that line through life? How many times had she recited it to herself as a motto? Ever since she had heard those words for the first time as a child, she had always held them close to her heart.   “Fufufufu..” Atsuko chuckled. “What should we have on our tombstone then, since our favourite phrase is already taken?”   “Akko! Do not be so morbid!” Diana snapped at her a bit. “Besides, we have plenty of options for an epitaph, my silly love. ‘Believe in your believing heart’, perhaps?” Diana pinched her spouse in the waist. Atsuko in return smiled contently at her partner. She had always found harmless, playful banter like this amusing.   “I guess I’ll always be Akko to you and the family.” Atsuko chuckled once more. The Japanese woman had presented herself with the nickname ‘Akko’ in her youth, but had decided to drop it once she had become a mother. It had been an attempt to seem more grown-up to her friends and colleagues. However, for most of her closest friends and her family, ‘Akko’ had managed to stick anyway.   “As far as I can recall, you have never told me to call you anything else since we first met.” Diana replied. “Other than ‘my love’, I suppose.” Diana stroke Atsuko’s cheek, while smiling softly.   “Still such a gentle charmer, aren’t you?” Atsuko winked at her wife.   “For you, everyday.” Diana beamed happily. Once again Atsuko got an ethereal sensation about Diana, feeling as if magic was swirling around her. Atsuko looked at her in awe for a short moment, before returning to a soft smile. Diana had not seemed to notice.   “Though we really should get going now, love. Otherwise, we will actually be late.” Diana told slightly concerned.   “Alright, alright.” Atsuko replied lightheartedly. “I don’t feel like mulling more over gloomy things at the moment anyway. And you’ve already cheered me up plenty.”   “I am glad that I can, my silly worrywart” Diana said, and returned the peck she had gotten earlier. “Come now, the family is waiting!”
The old couple retrieved their brooms they had left leaning against the dry stone wall. The two witches chanted the spell Tia Freyre together in unison, and began floating slightly above the ground on their brooms.   “Ready, dear?” Atsuko wondered before they took off.   “Yes, my love.” Diana replied quickly, with no need for further thought. However, as they were about to leave, a sudden gale kicked up around them. The trees near them shook and the leaves rustled heavily. Diana and Atsuko started to look around themselves, and noticed a fantastic amount of green wisps of magic flying past them. The wisps begun to form into two gestalts in front of them.
The two anthropomorphic apparitions then began to diverge in appearance. One had a fantastically long and flowing crimson hair, while the other had a shorter but still distinct purple hair. Atsuko and her wife were looking on in utter awe. It had started to dawn on them what was happening in front of them. Atsuko could feel that tears were about to swell from her eyes.
The red-haired spirit took on a final appearance. She appeared to be wearing a long, flowing dress made of white lily petals that had been intricately connected together. It had flowy sleeves that seemed to be detached from the rest of dress. The spirit had several motifs of four-pointed stars. There was a star on each sleeve cuff, another appearing as a cutout from the dress underneath the chest, and lastly, as a marking on her forehead.
The other spirit was ready soon after. The purple-haired wraith seemed to wear a black dress made of dark rose petals, contrasting with the other spirit. On top of the dress, around what would be the spirit’s torso, she wore an ornate mesh of leather bands. The spirit also appeared to be wearing a hooded cape, almost as deeply red as the other spirit’s hair. On her forehead there were linear markings, running from the forehead and then down the sides of the neck and eventually reaching out on her hands. These lines were possibly reaching every part of her body similar to arteries, but they could not be seen. Along these lines there were small node-like markings. The line markings slowly pulsated a faint green with magic.
There was no mistaking any more of who these apparitions were. Croix Meridies. Chariot du Nord. The two had awaken from their slumber.
Diana and Atsuko were still watching in complete amazement. Both of them were astonished by the visage of the spirits in front of them. Despite the two witches hovering a meter or two over the ground, Chariot and Croix’s spirits were towering before them.
The fantastical appearance of Chariot had reminded Atsuko of the various displays Chariot had taken as Shiny Chariot during the show she had attended as a little girl. It was like a lifetime ago she had seen Chariot like this, the Japanese woman thought to herself, but quickly corrected herself. No, she had never seen Chariot like this.
While the spirits of Chariot and Croix may have seemed younger than their human selves before they passed away, a more proper description would be that they were ageless. They were distinctly otherworldly now, stemming from their dryadic nature, no longer bound to human aging.
The two tree spirits opened their eyes at last, and smiled softly at their astounded visitors.   “How.. are you?” Atsuko eventually asked, not able to muster anything else to say. The spirits remained silent, until Chariot answered:   “It cannot be fully described in words.” Her voice sounded ethereal and reverberating, but it was unmistakingly Chariot’s voice. “I am still getting used to see the world like this.”   “I can sense every flow of magic around me.” Croix decided to weigh in, also with a supernatural sounding voice. “I can sense it from you, the trees, every straw of grass around us. It is overwhelming, yet at the same time perfectly manageable.”   “I am able to trace the flows backwards, to sense where they came from.” Chariot explained. “I can sense right now every time you have come here since we left the mortal world. What you said, what you looked like. It is as if I had been aware of it myself.”   “Amazing..” Diana responded awed.   “It is paradoxical.” Croix said in bewilderment. “I know we both have just awakened, yet it feels like we never even left! I can become aware of anything that has happened around us since then. I liked that time when you sang for us, Akko.” The Japanese lady got instantly embarrassed. When she had visited the memorial hill by herself some time last year, she had eventually started singing some old songs to herself underneath the trees on impulse. Or so she had thought, at least. Apparently she had had some audience after all. Diana let out a hearty laugh in response.    “I wonder.. does this mean you can sense into the future as well?” Diana inquired curious.   “No, we cannot trace where the magic flows has not gone yet. The future remains unwritten, even as spirits it seems.” The French witch answered.
Atsuko could no longer help herself. A surge of emotions rose through her, and she could no longer hold back any tears.   “I’m so.. I’m so glad I could see you again.” The old lady stammered a bit because of her sobbing. “You both still make this old fart’s heart go doki doki no waku waku.” Both of her old teachers laughed, with Diana joining in. They could all clearly remember how Atsuko would on occasion excitedly shout this Japanese phrase. None of them had gotten a clear idea what it actually meant, even when Atsuko had tried to explain it. To them, it simply was a phrase describing a level of excitement only Atsuko could seemingly reach.   “We’re glad to see you again, Akko” Chariot replied cordially. “Even if it feels like we have seen each other several times since we last met, for me and Croix.” The crimson-haired spirit tried to carefully stroke her former student’s cheek. It was rather difficult, due to the spirit’s sheer size. The Japanese woman tilted her head and rested it against Chariot’s hand. It was an inexplicable sensation, since Chariot’s apparition was actually made of magic. But it was warm and comforting nonetheless, Atsuko thought.
Croix had eyed Atsuko and Diana for a little while. Almost as if she was scanning them with her eyes.   “I just noticed something..” Croix began. “From the amount of magic emanating from you, I can tell that both of you are ready to become dryads whenever you desire.” Oh, Atsuko thought to herself. It may have been beyond her own understanding, but the ethereal sensations she had felt from her wife had indeed not been just her own imagination. Somehow, she could sense this inherent dryadic connection that all witches have with magic, and that she had been able notice it with Diana? But not with herself? Atsuko didn’t know what to do with any of this. It started to make her brain fuzzy and hurting by thinking too deeply about this. She made a scrunched face while pondering.   “Well, today is not the day.” Diana answered. “There are people waiting for us, and I do not think they would appreciate if we just disappeared on them. Though I must admit that I had completely forgotten the time.”   “No, I am not really in a hurry either to become a tree today.” Atsuko replied relieved. “Though after seeing you today, I can’t say that I’m dreading it either. I will probably make an excellent sakura tree.” Her blunt, tongue-in-cheek comment led to a laugh from the other three present.
The laughter had led to a brief, quiet moment with everyone seemingly thinking to themselves.   “What will you do now, after we leave?” Diana wondered.   “I suppose Croix and I will have a look around here on the grounds of Luna Nova, before returning to the Dream.” Chariot answered, after a bit of thought.   “The Dream..?” Atsuko sounded a bit confused.   “Even when we were laying dormant, we have been dreaming together.” Croix began to explain. “Not only us two, but all spirits connected with the roots of Yggdrasil.”   “I am not sure I understand..?” Diana answered slightly bewildered. “You are all in a shared dream?”   “It is as a world of its own.” Croix continued. “A vast, boundless dreamscape, yet nothing nor no one is ever too far away. It is even more bizarre than how we sense this world.”   “We have met countless of ancient witches and spirits, some far older than even Woodward, as well as old friends and acquaintances while dreaming.” Chariot added on. “As they say, we are all leaves on a tree.”
The elderly witch couple were being mesmerized in front of their old teachers, trying to comprehend the description of what would essentially be their afterlife. Atsuko felt that her head was starting to hurt again.   “..I think I’m getting too hungry for this..” Atsuko told in jestful tone, while rubbing the side of her head. “Ahahaha! I guess you two don’t need to eat anymore?”   “I think you already know the answer to that.” The Italian wraith replied with a sly smirk.   “We should not keep you any longer, however.” Chariot weighed in concerned.   “I can already sense that they are starting to worry about you.”   “Yes, I suppose we should get going now.” Diana nodded in reply. “For real this time.”   “I think we’ll get scolded by the grandkids, dear.” Atsuko sighed, but in a facetious manner. “Again.”
The four witches held onto each other’s hands while saying farewell. It was certainly a more upbeat and hopeful mood this time compared to the last time they had told each other goodbye.   “Akko, I suppose I don’t need to remind you?” Chariot asked, with a loving smile. The old lady beamed.   “Fwahaha! You know we will never forget those words!” Atsuko answered, with all of her heart.
The Japanese witch and her British wife waved goodbye at the spirits of their old friends, as they begun to fly away on their brooms. An evening breeze rustled the leaves in the trees nearby once more. Atsuko could see as she looked back on her broom, that Chariot and Croix had clasped each other’s hands, just like they had done when they had passed away. She smiled gently at the wondrous sight of the two spirits looking tenderly at each other. Atsuko then turned her gaze to her wife flying next to her. Today is not the day, she recalled and repeated to herself. The old witch reached out her hand to her wife while smiling at her. Diana quickly noticed, and took her hand. The two witches held hands, as they flew and entered the leyline.
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flaviadraw · 6 years
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Day 7 of @brettmanningart #omensdrawingchallenge⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Solar eclipse ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ In that great journey of the stars through space⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ About the mighty, all-directing Sun,⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ The pallid, faithful Moon, has been the one⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Companion of the Earth. Her tender face,⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Pale with the swift, keen purpose of that race,⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Which at Time’s natal hour was first begun,⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Shines ever on her lover as they run⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ And lights his orbit with her silvery smile.⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Sometimes such passionate love doth in her rise,⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Down from her beaten path she softly slips,⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ And with her mantle veils the Sun’s bold eyes,⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Then in the gloaming finds her lover’s lips.⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ While far and near the men our world call wise⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ See only that the Sun is in eclipse.⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ -Ella Wheeler Wilcox ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ #folklore #lore #mythology #spooky #illu #illustrations #illustratiogram #art #drawing #ink #digitalart #alchemicalmarriage #solareclipse https://ift.tt/2SOxdht
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until-my-last · 8 years
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Zutara month- day 11: partners
Here’s my contribution to this year’s Zutara Month!
Prompt: partners, day 11
This little fic is actually part of my multichaptered fic, Time Heals Wounds (but leaves scars), found both on ff and ao3. It follows canon events, but is basically me trying to make canon compatible with a Zutara endgame. In this fic, Katara is married to Aang and Zuko’s a widow, and Zuko pays a little visit to the Southern Water Tribe while Aang’s away. Hope you guys enjoy!
Time heals wounds (but leaves scars)
45.
She’s forty-five when her father passes away peacefully in his sleep.
She’d prepared herself for that moment; but it doesn’t stop her from missing him so terribly.
Sokka is elected chief of the Southern Water Tribe. Choosing to step down from his position as Chairman of the United Republic Council, he moves back to the South Pole to accept his newfound duties. Suki decides to join him as her ‘early retirement plan’, as their twins, Lian and Erika, take on their mother’s mantle as joint leaders of the Kyoshi Warriors back on the island.
One of his first actions as chieftain is to reinforce the good, solid relations between the Southern Tribe and the Fire Nation.
Basically, he invites one of his best friends to a week-long sleepover in the South Pole.
Druk lands one morning on the icy banks of the South Pole, unleashing a torpedo of fire through the harsh, freezing morning air. After Zuko and Izumi climb down from his back, he takes off again in search of hotter climes- he never did like the cold. Father and daughter are huddled in the thickest furs available in the Fire Nation, shivering as the cold bites the slightest bit of exposed skin. Their smiles, though, are pure warmth as they catch sight of their welcoming committee.
Bumi brushes past his mother and uncle. After a hasty but respectful bow in Zuko’s direction, much to the Firelord’s amusement, he grabs Izumi and pulls her into a tight hug. The young woman is as composed and graceful as Bumi is brash and exuberant, but ever since their first meeting almost fifteen years ago, they’ve gotten along like a house on fire. Katara has always found that both odd and charming.
Kya pops up behind her brother, chattering excitedly. The Fire Nation princess lets Bumi go and scoops up the younger girl into her arms. Over Kya’s shoulder, Izumi spots Katara and waves, a huge grin on her face.
Sokka and Suki greet them with jokes and hugs. Sokka grabs their bags, despite Zuko’s protests, and Suki fusses over Izumi’s thin scarf.
Katara, on the other hand, hangs back. She’s jittery, brimming with nervous energy. Zuko’s here. They’ve seen each other regularly over the past few years, but the reunions mostly happen in a formal setting, surrounded by people. She hasn’t had a head-to-head with him in forever. And now here he is, for a week, and she realizes she isn’t sure how to act.
The revelation is unsettling, to say the least.
Zuko catches her eye, and shoots her a small smile. She barely has time to answer before he’s whisked away with his daughter- Sokka has taken it upon himself to guide them to the guest hut.
She lets out a huff of breath, watching the resulting steam rise from her lips, and heads back home.
--
He finds her, hours later, sitting in front of a fire in her living room with a bowl of rice wine in her hand and a bottle at her feet. There’s a bag hanging from his shoulder.
"Sokka tells me Aang is away with Tenzin. Kyoshi Island, is it?"
She nods, taking a sip from the bowl resting between her palms. She gestures to the spot next to her on the couch and holds out the bottle of wine.
It feels like Aang is always away, these days. Bumi and Kya feel it more than anyone else.
Zuko stares at the bottle for a second, before taking it from her and sitting by her side. He sets the bag down beside him.
The flame from the fire flickers, casting shadows across his face. Zuko’s, what, forty-seven now? He still keeps his hair short, just long enough to pull into a topknot. Streaks of gray are starting to show at the roots. Her eyes travel from his temple to his cheekbones, that responsibility and passing years haven’t dulled in the slightest. Her fingers twitch when her gaze falls on his scar. The slightest of wrinkles have started to appear at the corner of his right eye.
Age, she finds, seems to suit Zuko.
"It’s good to see you again," she tells him.
Gold eyes lock on blue. "Same." His mouth quirks up. Lifting the bottle to his lips, he takes a long swig.
Katara’s eyes are fixed on the way his throat moves, the way his muscles tense and relax beneath pale skin. There’s a pull in her lower abdomen, and she shifts slightly in her seat. Her lips seem to have suddenly gone dry; she blames it partly on the alcohol that’s started to stroll through her system.
She gives herself a mental shake. "So, how have you been? Really."
The light in his eyes dim, just a little. "I’m...okay. It’s getting better." His fingers absently trace the bottle. "Nine years already," he exhales.
After nine years, it still hurts. She knows how that feels. You never get over losing someone you love, not really. "Izumi’s turning out to be quite a young woman."
There’s no mistaking the pride that spreads across his face. "She is. One day, she’ll be a wonderful Firelord, if that’s what she wants."
"Well, she learnt from the best."
His gaze is burning when it meets hers. "Thanks, Katara," he says softly. He clears his throat. "You’ve done a pretty spectacular job with yours, as well."
She shrugs, attempting to lighten the mood. "I like to think so, too. I did bring them up," she adds with mock haughtiness.
Zuko laughs, and oh how she has missed the sound. She can’t stop the smile that graces her lips as his eyes crinkle and his lips curl. He’s almost breathtaking like this.
She shifts again to face Zuko, and pulls one leg up onto the couch. Placing one elbow on the back of the couch, she rests her head against her open palm. "Tell me, how’s Toph? Haven’t seen her in ages. How are the kids? Aang said Suyin’s proving to be quite the troublemaker."
He’s still smiling when he answers. "She’s fine, last time I saw her. Ruling the Police Force with an iron fist." They both grin at the terrible pun. "And yes, Suyin’s going to be quite a handful for both her sister and her mother."
He pauses to take another sip from the bottle. "Toph misses you. More than she’ll admit."
Warmth blooms in Katara’s chest. She misses her friend, too. "Tell her I’ll stop by soon."
"Oh! Speaking of."
Zuko twists in his seat to grab the bag he had brought with him. Reaching inside, he pulls out an old, tattered hat covered with a thin veil.
Katara gasps. "My Painted Lady hat! How-"
Zuko gently places the hat on her head. "Toph happened to stop by Jang Hui on one of her rounds. They’d kept it as memorabilia. She thought you might want to have it back."
She adjusts it, letting the veil fall in front of her eyes, and beams. "Thank you, Zuko!"
He says nothing for a moment, before leaning forward, setting his forearms on his knees. "It’s been years, now, but I believe you still owe me a dance."
She swears her heart stutters in her chest. She blinks at him. "There’s no music." It comes out as a whisper.
His eyes search hers, looking for something Katara isn’t quite sure she can give him. "I don’t care if you don’t."
She doesn’t.
She’s aware of how her fingers are shaking when she stands up and extends her hand. He takes it without a word, slipping her fingers through hers; the shaking stops. The other hand rests on her waist.
That’s when she realizes it.
Dancing with Aang- it’s demonstrative, ceremonial. It’s a fun, enjoyable spectacle meant for everyone to share.
But dancing with Zuko is like sparring with him- instinctive and personal. It’s visceral. It’s just the two of them. No music, no audience. The rhythm is set by their feet and their heartbeat, as their steps follow a natural progression imposed only by their intuition.
They’re partners, that’s what they are. It’s what they’ve always been.
The dance slows down, and Katara leans her veil-covered cheek onto Zuko’s shoulder, willing her breathing to return to normal. She has one hand cupped around the back of his neck, the other presses on his chest. His own rest on her waist.
"It’s one of my favorite legends. The Painted Lady," he murmurs. They’re slowly turning in circles, wrapped in each other’s arms. For a while, whatever’s outside her small living room ceases to exist.
"Oh, really?" Her cheek rises and falls with each one of his breaths.
"Mhm. There was always something tragically poetic about a water spirit helping a struggling Fire Nation village. Some say she’s connected to the Moon Spirit. Figures you’d pick her out of all Fire Nation folklore. You seem to have a penchant for saving Fire Nation lost causes."
The self-depreciation she hasn’t heard from him in years causes her to lift her head. "Hey-"
The dancing stops. One hand lets go of her waist. "I think," his voice is quiet, "her markings look like this."
Katara stills as his thumb rests against her forehead, before tracing a crescent shape. His other hand comes up beneath the veil, and both thumbs start from her temples, over her eyelids that have fluttered close, down the sides of her nose. The pressure temporarily eases, then she feels his fingers over her cheekbones, under her jaw. Her eyes are still closed when she feels the lightest touch under her bottom lip, trailing down her chin.
Her breath catches in her throat.
"If you want me to stop," she feels his words on her lips, doesn’t miss the light tremor in his voice, "just say so. I will."
Oh, she should. She really, really should. She swallows. "No."
She starts when his lips brush against hers through the veil. The strange texture against her mouth sends sparks through her body, and her eyes fly open to find his own amber ones glittering back at her in the firelight, both wary and intent. There isn’t a hint of inebriation.
This. This has been here for a long time now. Building up behind some imaginary dam, slowly gathering force, increasing the pressure.
All it takes is a crack for the dam to break.
The rice wine, Katara thinks, is that crack in the dam. It’s the match that has lit the fire, and now she’s watching it burn.
She lifts the veil from her face, knocking back the hat in the process, but she barely has time to register anything as Zuko pulls her into a kiss.
There’s traces of rice wine on his lips, and the hint of something salty. Her hand sinks into the strands of inky black hair at his nape; she needs more. Zuko slips one hand behind her neck to bring her closer, fingers playing with the curls behind her ear. She lets out a small moan against his mouth.
He takes the opportunity to deepen the kiss, until all Katara feels is his mouth on hers, his warm hands on her body, his steady heartbeat under her palm.
She can’t remember the last time she’s felt this way.
Her hand slips down his chest, and Zuko pins it in place, pressing it close. She feels it, under his tunic. It’s subtle, the barest hint of raised skin beneath thick fabric, but she’d recognize it anywhere. His scar.
Her fingers dig into the skin, entirely unconsciously, but it causes Zuko to break the kiss and look at her, gold eyes scorching.
What she sees there- it’s a revelation. And Katara suddenly understands.
She loves Aang with all her heart. There’s no question about it. But she’s not in love with him- not anymore. She wonders briefly if she ever was.
Zuko, though...
They’re partners.
He presses his lips lightly against her pulse point, just the barest touch that sends shivers down to her toes.
"Katara," there’s a rough tenderness in his voice that makes her stomach flip, "I-"
"Mum?" Kya’s voice breaks through the hazy pleasure that clouds her mind. Her hand falls from his chest and she steps back from Zuko just in time; her daughter enters the living room.
"Mum, Dad just sent a letter. He’ll be here tomorrow. He says-" her voice falters, as her gaze shifts from her mother to the Firelord standing two feet away. Zuko is staring at the floor, one hand rubbing the back of his neck. "He says he’s excited about the visitors, and he can’t wait to see the royal family again."
Zuko speaks first. "Thank you, Kya." He turns to Katara. "I should probably-"
"Oh, no, it’s fine!" The young girl’s outburst surprises them both. "I just thought I’d let you know about the letter." Kya bites her lip. "I’m going to go, don’t worry. Goodnight, Mum." She shoots Katara a look that the older woman can’t quite decipher. "Goodnight, Fire- sorry, Zuko."
"Goodnight, sweetheart," Katara calls out as her daughter retreats.
A heavy silence fills the room following Kya’s exit.
Katara knows what her heart wants, now, though it’s taken her years to figure it out. But she’s Katara of the Southern Water Tribe, wife of the Avatar- nurturer, sister, mother, supporter- and her family needs her. What her heart wants has never been a priority.
It still isn’t- but it’s never hurt this much before.
"I’m-"
She spins to face him, cutting him off with a furious glare. "If you dare apologize, Zuko, I swear-" Hot tears start to prick at the corner of her eyes, and she hates it.
"No! No. I wouldn’t." He runs a hand through his hair, and glances at her. "Not for that."
It’s what she wants to hear, but her heart breaks anyway. It occurs to her how much easier this would have been if neither of them cared. What have I done, she thinks. What do I do? She sinks down onto the couch, head hanging low.
"I- I’m yours, Katara."
She freezes when he takes one of her hands in his and places it just above his scar, just as it was minutes ago. She feels the bumpy, rough texture beneath her palms. His other hand reaches out to cup her face, and his breath tickles her cheek. "Tell me what you want."
Yeah, she knows what she wants. She just can’t have it.
A wave of exhaustion overcomes her, and a weight settles in her chest. "Aang is coming back tomorrow, with one of my children. I’m going to bed, Zuko." She catches the hurt that flashes across his face, and looks away. She can’t handle that right now. Picking up her Painted Lady hat, she hands it to Zuko. Their hands brush; she doesn’t pull away. "She’s yours, though."
She leaves the firebender in the living room with the hat and most of her heart.
---
The next day, Aang returns with Tenzin.
Katara cooks for her family and their guests, reprimands Bumi when he playfully picks on his younger brother, and thanks her husband for the ornamental fan he brought back from Kyoshi Island with a hug.
It’s back to status quo. At least on the outside.
If someone notices Zuko helping out in the kitchen, or the way Katara’s hand lingers a little longer when she’s passing him the salt, they don’t ever mention it.
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maryseward666 · 7 years
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Agalloch Record Lot Pale Folklore The Mantle Black Metal Folk
Agalloch Record Lot Pale Folklore The Mantle Black Metal Folk
RARE BLACK METAL COLLECTIBLES $90.00End Date: Sunday Sep-24-2017 17:20:19 PDTBuy It Now for only: $90.00Buy It Now | Add to watch list MY BLOG: http://www.rockoutwithyourcockout.com/
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ricardosousalemos · 8 years
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Pillorian: Obsidian Arc
Agalloch’s dissolution last year was a huge loss to bear, and only half of that has to do with how beloved the groundbreaking black metal group were. Vocalist/guitarist John Haughm was at the root of the breakup, something he’ll own up to: he wanted to tour more than the rest of the band, especially guitarist Don Anderson, who chose to focus on his academic career. Haughm irked fans by referring to himself as a “visionary,” not only committing the sin of Having an Ego (see: any time Kanye West makes headlines), but also marginalizing the contributions of his bandmates. Anderson was a key songwriter and brought much of the folk element to Agalloch. And Aesop Dekker, a powerhouse drummer who also plays key roles in VHÖL and Worm Ouroboros, crucially filled out their live sound.
To his credit, Haughm realized he had to break away from the Agalloch name and start anew. His latest group, Pillorian, strips away some of Agalloch’s neofolk influence and dives heavier into their black and dark metal roots. That he’s rebuilding is obvious throughout their debut Obsidian Arc. For a less experienced band, the album would be a promising starting point. For someone of Haughm’s caliber, it’s slightly underwhelming.
Pillorian’s strengths come from Agalloch’s familiar comforts—layered, sonorous riffs and tonal shifts as smooth as the guitars are heavy—delivered with more immediacy. “By the Light of a Black Sun” opens with the contrast of bright acoustic guitar and rolling metal waves that was a staple of 1999’s Pale Folklore and 2002’sThe Mantle. The allure reigns brief, before succumbing to Haughm’s torrents of fury, assisted by drummer Trevor Matthews and guitarist Stephen Parker. While there is another acoustic break towards the end of “Sun,” the song sets the tone for the rest of the album, specifically its reliance on more metallic drivers and moods. Like Agalloch, Pillorian still finds a balance between soft and loud closer to their more progressive rock influences—King Crimson and Genesis’ artier takes and Rush’s more hard-rock based brand—than post-rock. It’s a little more evident here, since Arc is Haughm’s most “metal” record thus far. Arc is far from breezy—no interludes, no folky passages—which clashes with Haughm’s evident urgency to get it out there. “The Sentient Arcanum” is the exception, drawing up on Haughm’s solo guitar ambient works, more Fennesz than Fleurety.
The rest of Arc is more furious, but no less majestic. “A Stygian Pyre” feels angrier than anything he’s ever done, an example of spark and quickness working in his favor. Haughm has a knack for elevating black metal’s fast-picked tremolos, revealing their symphonic potential. They are the fuel for Arc’s momentum, especially in “Sun” and “Pyre.” “Archanian Divinity” shows an affinity for Swedish black metal—especially Watain’s slower breaks and Dissection’s frosty, florlorn atmosphere and blackening of classic metal melodies. Haughm is a living Jon Nödtveidt without an accessory to murder charge, one who saw towering might in pushing the melodic pillars of Priest and Maiden to new heights.
While Agalloch existed in black metal’s progressive wing, they were still a metal band, and thus understood the magic of a rapturous solo. Those moments are rare in Arc, which is its main problem. Haughm knows how to give his songs heft, but he’s missing that lighter fluidity that complimented Agalloch’s nature themes. One exception is “Dark is the River of Man,” the closer, where those leads cut through the brooding atmosphere. It resembles Katatonia if they’d honed in on their death/doom sound, instead of turning into goth AOR. “Forged Iron Crucible” also features choral vocals that gleam at what made Agalloch great. Some more bursts of beauty like that would help.
Arc showcases Haughm’s singular metal voice and commanding presence, but it also reveals what a group effort Agalloch was. Haughm is floundering without the right partners; it proves why his “visionary” claim felt dubious. For any creative endeavor, a little self-assurance is necessary for survival. But no matter your skill, with a band, you can’t go it alone.
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flaviadraw · 6 years
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Day 7 of @brettmanningart #omensdrawingchallenge⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Solar eclipse ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ In that great journey of the stars through space⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ About the mighty, all-directing Sun,⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ The pallid, faithful Moon, has been the one⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Companion of the Earth. Her tender face,⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Pale with the swift, keen purpose of that race,⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Which at Time’s natal hour was first begun,⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Shines ever on her lover as they run⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ And lights his orbit with her silvery smile.⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Sometimes such passionate love doth in her rise,⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Down from her beaten path she softly slips,⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ And with her mantle veils the Sun’s bold eyes,⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ Then in the gloaming finds her lover’s lips.⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ While far and near the men our world call wise⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ See only that the Sun is in eclipse.⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ -Ella Wheeler Wilcox ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀ #folklore #lore #mythology #spooky #illu #illustrations #illustratiogram #art #drawing #ink #digitalart #alchemicalmarriage #solareclipse — view on Instagram https://ift.tt/2IYr7LP
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maryseward666 · 7 years
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Agalloch Record Lot Pale Folklore The Mantle Black Metal Folk
Agalloch Record Lot Pale Folklore The Mantle Black Metal Folk
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maryseward666 · 7 years
Text
Agalloch Record Lot Pale Folklore The Mantle Black Metal Folk
RARE BLACK METAL COLLECTIBLES
$90.00 End Date: Sunday Sep-24-2017 17:20:19 PDT Buy It Now for only: $90.00 Buy It Now | Add to watch list
MY BLOG: http://www.rockoutwithyourcockout.com/
from Rock Out With Your Cock Out http://rover.ebay.com/rover/1/711-53200-19255-0/1?ff3=2&toolid=10039&campid=5338022605&item=112540599098&vectorid=229466&lgeo=1 via IFTTT
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