Tristran Thorn (
tristranthorn) wrote2007-05-12 01:17 am
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[013] OOM - Towards the Light of the Inn
Seeing the illumination from the inn fills Tristran with a feeling of happiness and wonderfulness he hasn't felt in a really long while -- not since he'd left Wall so many days ago, and perhaps even the coziness of Milliways, all distant memories now.
The carriage pulls up to the little cottage-like building, and while Tristran immediately begins to unhitch the horses (which he knows must be absolutely exhausted), leading them one by one towards the stables located on the side of the inn, Primus bellows for assistance.
There is a white horse, asleep in the furthest stall, but Tristran is far too busy with other things to pause and inspect it -- the horses are obviously tired and hungry. Even moreso than he is. Anything else can wait.
"I'll groom the horses," he tells Primus. "They'll catch a chill otherwise."
The tall man rests one large hand on Tristran's shoulder, a quiet and subtle smile reaching his face. "Good lad," he says, "I'll send a potboy out with some burnt ale for you."
Tristran nods before Primus disappears, no doubt to organize the details of their lodging, thinking distantly of the star as he brushes down the horses and picks out their hooves. Somehow, in the same strange way he seems to know directions and distances of things he had never seen before in his life, he knows that the star is close by -- he'll see her soon. The thought alone is a conflicting one, bringing both comfort and a sense of nervousness (though he isn't sure why). Once they are reunited, what will he say? What will she say?
His thought is interrupted by the silent entrance of a potgirl, carrying a tankard of steaming wine. "Put it down over there," he tells her. "I'll drink it with goodwill as soon as my hands are free."
The girl obeys, placing it upon the top of a tack box before leaving just as silently. Tristran doesn't have a chance to ponder the girl's silence before the horse in the end stall begins to kick against the door, nearly making the young man jump in his spot.
"Settle down, there," he calls. "Settle down, fellow, and I'll see if I cannot find warm oats and bran for all of you."
Tristran finds a large stone in the stallion's front inside hoof, and with care, he begins to remove it, his thoughts straying back to the star.
Madam -- this is how he thinks he might very well start off their conversation -- please accept my heartfelt and most humble apologies.
Yes ... it sounds polite. Proper. And of course, she would respond with something like, Sir, that I shall do with all my heart. Now let us go to your village, where you shall present me to your true love, as a token of your devotion to her --
There is more clattering -- louder and more powerful this time -- from the end stall with the white horse. Except, Tristran realizes quite immediately, that it is not a horse at all but a ... monster! Or some great beast coming to charge after him, horn lowered. Instinctively, Tristran throws himself down into the straw by the floor, covering his head with his arms, waiting in frozen patience for a moment before slowly looking up. The monster is no monster at all, and is in fact a unicorn.
Tristran watches, slowly getting to his feet, as the unicorn stops before the tankard and lowers its horn into the mulled wine, still steaming and bubbling. And it occurs to him then as he studies the white beast (from some long-forgotten fairytale or a piece of children's lore) that a unicorn's horn is proof against...
"Poison?" he whispers, eyes widening a bit. His heart is pounding in his chest as the unicorn raises its head, looking into his eyes, even through him. No, it...can't be.
Tristran runs towards the stable door, then freezing in his tracks, he pauses for a moment. He fumbles quickly in his pocket, looking for something in particular. From his right pocket, he pulls out the lump of wax (which is all that remains of the rather sad, pathetic candle) and the dried copper leaf which sticks to it. Peeling it from the wax carefully, he takes in a breath, and raises it to his ear.
The carriage pulls up to the little cottage-like building, and while Tristran immediately begins to unhitch the horses (which he knows must be absolutely exhausted), leading them one by one towards the stables located on the side of the inn, Primus bellows for assistance.
There is a white horse, asleep in the furthest stall, but Tristran is far too busy with other things to pause and inspect it -- the horses are obviously tired and hungry. Even moreso than he is. Anything else can wait.
"I'll groom the horses," he tells Primus. "They'll catch a chill otherwise."
The tall man rests one large hand on Tristran's shoulder, a quiet and subtle smile reaching his face. "Good lad," he says, "I'll send a potboy out with some burnt ale for you."
Tristran nods before Primus disappears, no doubt to organize the details of their lodging, thinking distantly of the star as he brushes down the horses and picks out their hooves. Somehow, in the same strange way he seems to know directions and distances of things he had never seen before in his life, he knows that the star is close by -- he'll see her soon. The thought alone is a conflicting one, bringing both comfort and a sense of nervousness (though he isn't sure why). Once they are reunited, what will he say? What will she say?
His thought is interrupted by the silent entrance of a potgirl, carrying a tankard of steaming wine. "Put it down over there," he tells her. "I'll drink it with goodwill as soon as my hands are free."
The girl obeys, placing it upon the top of a tack box before leaving just as silently. Tristran doesn't have a chance to ponder the girl's silence before the horse in the end stall begins to kick against the door, nearly making the young man jump in his spot.
"Settle down, there," he calls. "Settle down, fellow, and I'll see if I cannot find warm oats and bran for all of you."
Tristran finds a large stone in the stallion's front inside hoof, and with care, he begins to remove it, his thoughts straying back to the star.
Madam -- this is how he thinks he might very well start off their conversation -- please accept my heartfelt and most humble apologies.
Yes ... it sounds polite. Proper. And of course, she would respond with something like, Sir, that I shall do with all my heart. Now let us go to your village, where you shall present me to your true love, as a token of your devotion to her --
There is more clattering -- louder and more powerful this time -- from the end stall with the white horse. Except, Tristran realizes quite immediately, that it is not a horse at all but a ... monster! Or some great beast coming to charge after him, horn lowered. Instinctively, Tristran throws himself down into the straw by the floor, covering his head with his arms, waiting in frozen patience for a moment before slowly looking up. The monster is no monster at all, and is in fact a unicorn.
Tristran watches, slowly getting to his feet, as the unicorn stops before the tankard and lowers its horn into the mulled wine, still steaming and bubbling. And it occurs to him then as he studies the white beast (from some long-forgotten fairytale or a piece of children's lore) that a unicorn's horn is proof against...
"Poison?" he whispers, eyes widening a bit. His heart is pounding in his chest as the unicorn raises its head, looking into his eyes, even through him. No, it...can't be.
Tristran runs towards the stable door, then freezing in his tracks, he pauses for a moment. He fumbles quickly in his pocket, looking for something in particular. From his right pocket, he pulls out the lump of wax (which is all that remains of the rather sad, pathetic candle) and the dried copper leaf which sticks to it. Peeling it from the wax carefully, he takes in a breath, and raises it to his ear.
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Another shaky gasp of air and she crawls her way over to Tristran, ignoring the sharp pain that shoots up her leg in protest to the motion.
"What is happening?" she asks, careful to keep her voice from shaking.
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"I don't really know," he admits. "I was -- I don't know who that woman is, but the pot-maid tried to poison me."
Clutching the wax in his hand once more, he lets out a breath. "Are -- are you all right?"
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And they can't fix it this time.
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"Yes," he says, nodding his head solemnly. "The same way she ..."
Because of the woman, Primus is dead. He didn't know him very well, but what Tristran knows of him, Primus seems a decent fellow.
He can see the dark, lifeless body of the mysterious coach-man from across the other side of the room, blood staining the floor, and pooling around it. Tristran turns away, focusing his gaze on the star.
"Who is she?"
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She hadn't been polite at all and now he was dead.
"She was nice to me. She -" she blinks upward, eyes wide and horror-stricken. "I mean, I was cold and wet and I - I didn't know."
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And besides, telling her she shouldn't have run off isn't going to solve anything.
"Whoever she is, I think we're seeing what she's really like," he tells her. Which could mean real danger for them.
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There's a resigned sigh and the star opens her mouth around what might have been an apology had the sudden howl of the witch's voice not pierced the air. All that makes it's way out of her mouth is a ragged gasp, head turning and forgetting very suddenly just how to breathe.
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The beast's head rises triumphantly, pulling her body along with the motion and preparing to hurl her to the ground and dash her to death with its sharp hooves - when, impaled as she happens to be, the woman manages to swing herself around, point of the longer rock-glass knife plunging into the unicorn's eye and far into its skull.
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There is blood. Everywhere. More blood than he recalls seeing when Primus was killed. The beautiful white skin of the unicorn's head is stained red with it, dripping from its eye like tears of crimson death.
Tristran's heart is pounding uncontrollably in his chest. He can't look away. He can't even move.
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The fire roars behind them and all the star can think is that she is freezing and that the unicorn is dead and that he hadn't wanted to stop here.
The crash as the heavy bulk of the unicorn's body hits the floor wrenches a desperate noise from her throat - wild and terrified as the blood pools along the floorboards, life draining utterly with the spread of crimson.
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The witch-queen ignores all this, pulling herself from the horn casually, one hand gripping her wounded shoulder while the other refuses to let go of the cleaver.
And then she turns her head, scanning the room for what she'd cleverly devised this entire inn stage-set for, her eyes alighting at the sight of the young man and his star huddled by the fireplace.
A slow smile appears on her lips, splattered with drops of blood, and her grip tightens around the hilt of her knife.
"The burning golden heart of a star at peace is so much finer than the flickering heart of a little frightened star," she says, as though reading from a text. Her voice is cold, distant.
"But even the heart of a star who is afraid and scared is better by far than no heart at all."
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"Stand up," he tells her.
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How does your heart feel?
It's all about that - all about people looking for her and her heart catches in her throat again, fingers locking tight with Tristran's as she watches, still frozen.
"I cannot," she replies simply, hollowly.
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"Stand, or we die now."
It honestly comes out a little more harsher than he intended, but there isn't time to apologize. He starts getting to his feet, his left hand clenching on the lump of wax.
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(Now is not the time for this.)
She nods instead, awkwardly pulling herself upward, leaning her weight rather heavily upon him and trying to stay upright.
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That vicious smile widens and she takes another slow step forward.
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"Now," he says, gripping the star's arm and trying to help her keep upright, "now, walk!"
Taking a step forward, he thrusts his left hand, holding the makeshift candle with what is left of the wax lump, into the fireplace, flames quickly licking at it.
The pain and burning is immense -- almost unbearable, so that he might scream as loudly as he could -- but he is filled with adrenaline, and panic and fear. It keeps him silent.
The witch-queen raises an eyebrow, staring at the pair incredulously, her expression changing as though she might laugh.
But then the improvised wick catches, and slowly, a blue flame begins to grow.
"Please walk," he begs the star, his voice gentler this time. The world around them, it might be noted, begins to shimmer, almost becoming an unreality. "Don't let go of me."
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And yet she trusts him.
It's crazy and impossible and she trusts him - and when they take their first stumbling step forward the whole world seems to spin wildly around her, the inn disappearing in some lurching forward motion and the witch-queen's screams ringing in their ears.
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They walk through a wet underground cave before the images around them flicker, and they walk through the desert, white sand, bright and dry in the moonlight, blow past them.
By their third step, they are high above the earth. Tristran only vaguely notices the trees and hills and rivers below, like small little toys, before his energy depletes and the last of the wax drips over the side of his very burnt hand.
The flame slowly puckers out, fading forever.