The personal journal of William Morrison
-
Standing Watch
The soldier stands watch above the gate,
hidden lest he find his fate.Silhouetted against leaden skies,
gone to all but prying eyes.Ears seek past carrion bird skirling,
Eyes strain through snowflakes swirling,Waiting for the crunch of boot on snow,
or a shadowed half-seen foe.He dares not falter or fail the test,
Hours must pass ere he can rest.The soldier stands watch above the gate,
hidden lest he find his fate.
-
Confessions
Others have often praised my wisdom in understanding people - I can often see to their core, and know them and what drives them better than they do themselves. Alas, that sight does not work with everyone - and works more poorly the closer I am to someone - as though that very closeness blinds me.
So it is, that my wisdom, such as it is, completely fails me in dealing with those I am close to.
I ran into Yolande again… and she finally would speak with me.
Alone.
Originally, I had planned to be magiced to the hilt for this talk, and have someone to back me up to make sure the protections were not removed. Eventually I realized that was foolish. She could harm me or not as she chose - just follow and wait until the protections to wear off if need be. I trusted her once. The incidents notwithstanding, I believed I could trust her again. Nonetheless, it was not without some level of trepidation that I followed her to the Silver Valley.
She started by saying she would no longer torment me.
...then followed that up by calling me cruel.
Cruel? Me?
I knew I'd never been cruel to her - so I asked how.
She might as well have gut-punched me when she told me she'd had feelings for me - that I had asked her not to speak of love, so she had kept quiet. How she felt when I deserted her for Raver. How I had given her hope, then took it away without even giving her a chance.
She wished me luck with Raver...
...and then she left.
The lady has class.
Would I have done things differently, had I known? Almost certainly. Would things have worked out between us? Who knows. Could I have been happy with her? Almost certainly.
Do I regret that things went differently - that Raver and I are together instead?
Not for a moment.
I am sorry I hurt Yolande. My heart goes out to her, and I wish I could wipe away the hurt - but I would not change things now, even if offered the choice to go back and do it again.
-
Small Folk Troubles
Some hins and gnomes are good solid people, and I count some of each among my friends - but both races seem to have a higher than normal number of folk who exist to do nothing but cause trouble.
Went to Jiyyd with Raver. We've been just enjoying each other's company, but we've a house to build and much as I love spending quiet (or less than quiet) moments with her, we've a house to build, and that takes coin. We were hoping to pick up a few friends in Jiyyd and find a way to make some money… instead, the day ended up costing us most of what we had saved.
Shortly after we arrived in Jiyyd, a pair of badly-hurt hins did as well. Heedless of their injuries, they began running all over town with lit torches making as if to set fire to things. They kept that up until Steelfin finally stopped them to talk to them. Having finally gotten people's attention, they stopped - for just long enough, as Raver went to go talk to them too, to state their intention to burn down whatever the pleased. Of course, no militia were anywhere to be found.
Then the hin arsonists proceeded to make good on their statement, running around like madmen, setting fire to things as they went. People yelled at them to stop, and were ignored - so Raver did the only thing she could - she shot them both dead. I was a step behind her, bow drawn - but I never got to fire. We put out the fires, luckily managing to save the weaponsmith's barn before any serious damage was done, but unfortunately losing much of the crops...
...at which point the militia arrived and arrested Raver for murder. I asked that we be jailed together, so I could keep her company...
...so naturally they put us in different cells.
Granted, that didn't take long to get straightened out. I was doing a pretty good job of keeping Raver's mind off the situation and keeping her spirits up, when a huge orc was put into the cell with us. ...despite the other cell still being empty. Said orc made a pest of himself for a short while, but was not well, and expired shortly before Raver and I were released. I paid the fine before Raver could argue about being fined for saving the town. It wasn't right or fair that she should be fined for it - but it was the best we could expect, and the last thing we needed was for them to keep her there indefinitely, pending a trial that might go worse.
So, we left Jiyyd - and ran right into one of those damnable Urdlen gnomes on the far end of the Long Road, near the Crossroads.
We put it down after a hard fight, with some help from the Gypsy archers on the hill, but Abner had walked in in the middle and gotten paralyzed - and stayed paralyzed through the whole fight and after. I went to Jiyyd to get help for him. As I returned, more gnomes attacked. I don't know how many, and I don't remember much of the fight, as I fell during it. Raver ended up using much of the remaining money we had saved for the house to get me raised.
I'm really beginning to get tired of those gnomes. I spent years trying to find out everything I could about them, talking to everyone who was involved in attacks, and trying to piece things together... and I still know almost nothing about them. Granted, I gave up trying to actively find out information on them years ago - but I still know people who hadn't given up, and talking to them has produced nothing new.
I don't know if their priests are coming along after and raising them, but no community anywhere should have that many incredibly tough fanatics. I'm going to put out the word that its time to start burning the bodies after attacks. Maybe that will make them think twice.
-
Cured
Seer had indeed hidden one of the bones. A risky move, but it kept us from accidentally raising the lich - as surely would have happened when the bones were assembled under Cera's tree had we not been missing that one piece.
Nat was so sure Shannon had different plans - but there we were with the complete skeleton assembled under Cera's tree, on unhallowed ground - less that one bone.
If not for Seer, we'd have been fighting a lich that it took greater men than we to put down the first time.
The missing bone forced Shannon to discuss the proper procedure with Genzir, and it was decided to assemble the skeleton in the Kelemvor temple.
Once this was done, the bones turned to dust and the curse was lifted.
I doubt many realize just how much they owe Seer.
I'll be some time recovering. Time was running out, and the curse nearly killed us. Raver will help with that, and I'm looking forward to finishing our interrupted honeymoon. I so miss being able to touch her.
…but things are looking up, for the first time in a long time.
-
so clos
prt msing
mght ben bad if tried without
mina cried
dont blam her
all exhaustd
some say seer took
i don't believe
nderstnd want kill shannon but not rst
is clos
one has and not know
maybe jeni or cera have
so tird
-
*the following entry is full of misspellings, the incorrect letters having been crossed out and fixed. Several times, the writing trails off into a crooked line or inkblot, even in the middle of a word, as though the writer lost consciousness.
A careful observer would note that the entry appears to have been written over a period of several days, as the writing (though recognizably by the same hand) seems to vary widely in quality and neatness*
Raver,
If you're reading this, then they didn't find a cure in time… or there wasn't one to find....or maybe they found a cure, and you're sitting up reading this and watching me sleep.
I swear that if we survive this, you'll get to read my journal. It tells how I got to be who I am.
More important right now, it tells how I feel. Some words are gone. Maybe that's for the best. Simple words for important things.
Writing is hard now. Hard to think straight. Takes a long time to write anything. For once, I have nothing but time to write. ...but time is also the thing running out the fastest.
I love you, Raver. I never got a chance to tell you often enough before now, or to really show you. I write it here so that you can read it over and over and know it is more true every time you do. ...just in case I'm not around to tell you in person... or even if I am.
I want to let you know that I think of you all the time, and miss you terribly. I didn't have long to get used to the feel of having you next to me, but I miss that too.
*at this point, the entry gets nearly illegible, with the beginnings of words and phrases crossed out.
Love,
Will
-
Ael fell
so did I
Shannon brough me back but still cursed
Ael still dead
Barely made it out alive
Curse is getting worse
Hard to think most time
found a head and dried up hand
no idea if what we were looking for or not
rescue party met us on way out - now lily and serenty are cursed too.
dont think they'll let us leave the tree again
told steel to check on things, but everything getting fuzzy again
miss raver
hope she will be ok
-
this entry is written hastily, and the hand is shaky and hard to read, as if it were written in haste, by someone barely able to manage the task of writing
all going to die here for shannons pride
noone will listen
for whoever fnds ths
needto chk wth sig about bones
need to chek with sunites
mystrans + druids
oscuran libr needs checking too
-
Cursed
Some days, it just doesn't pay to be a light sleeper.
I sat up as the earth shook again, and looked over at Raver's face, so peaceful in sleep. We'd exhausted each other, but I spent too many years sleeping out in the wild to stay asleep when something around me was wrong.
I remember thinking "Better to let her sleep."
How right I was, though I didn't know it.
A feather touch, my hand brushing a stray lock of hair out of her face, and she almost woke, snuggling deeper into the bed instead. Then into the other room to dress, and out of the tree and to the Heartfires, where heroes gathered, ready to investigate the source of the repeated quakes that rocked the Camp.
Seer began screeching suddenly, making dire predictions of death in the pass.
Star checked out the collapsed mine - finding nothing unusual. She would have gone with us, but I think mistook where we were going, and got upset because she was being ignored. Better for her that she didn't join us.
Taria was there, willing to go with us. I still have mixed feelings about her, though she's nice enough. Nat went to go get Shannon, and they put an end to Taria's participation when they refused to go if Taria was along.
Perhaps we'd have been better off with Taria than Shannon and Nat. We had some harsh words about it at the time, and Nat spent an hour or so glaring at me. Unfortunately, most people pretty much ignored Seer.
Down into the Cold caves we went. The floor was littered with rubble fallen from the walls and ceiling, but at least the quakes had stopped.
We hadn't gotten very far in when Shannon found a box in some of the rubble and opened it. Unfortunately, it seems the box was the repository for a curse - a fairly nasty one. All of us were cursed and began to feel ill - even those some distance from Shannon - all except Wolf. We left the Cold Caves at that point, and went looking for a way to remove the curse.
I felt like hell. Weak and sweating. Coughing all the time. Couldn't breathe well.
Remove curse, we discovered, didn't work. Some further investigation of the box and some books Jeni had, gave us a bit more information: the curse was the Death Curse of the lich Mal'sheeron who had been hunted down and destroyed a thousand years ago.
Jeni had two different books - one mentioned Tormites destroying the lich, the other Tormites and Tyrrans. We split up, looking for more information. Mina and I went to Spellweaver Keep, Shannon and Nat to the Tyrran Temple, and Maya to the Sisterhood. At Spellweaver, Bingo had no books on the lich (something odd in and of itself), but remembered tales of a Helmite knight having carried out the lich's bones after he was destroyed. So - we went from Spellweaver to the Helmite Temple to speak with Sigmund. Genzir caught up with us on the way, and we explained what was going on - then the three of us went to the temple.
Sigmund had a book that mentioned Mal'sheeron - but only saying that a Sunite priestess had destroyed him by pouring all the power of her love into him. He never addressed the Helmite knight said to have taken the bones, even though we mentioned it several times. Bad as I felt from the effects of the curse, it didn't occur to me until later that this was strange. He's hiding something.
Back to the tree to compare notes…
...where we discovered that the curse was contagious by touch. Good thing Mina and I hadn't touched anyone while we were out - though Genzir had a close call when he examined us.
We also found that the other sources didn't match what we already knew - the Tyrran library said something about Mystrans having destroyed the lich, and books at the Sisterhood said it was a druid. This isn't good.
Too many completely different stories - not just different details, but completely different stories as to what happened. There was a confusion spell operating perhaps, or the different factions were at odds when the histories were written, or... perhaps the lich was never actually destroyed.
I wrote Raver a letter, explaining what had happened. Asked Steelfin to deliver it. For her sake, if not my own, I hope we find a cure for this. She doesn't need to lose someone again, so soon.
The books in question were retrieved and we looked over them again, trying to find anything we'd missed.
I wanted to go back and speak with Sigmund, pressing him for details on the bones - perhaps they are in the crypts below the Helmite Temple. I also wanted to talk to Lacey about whatever the Sunites might know.
Instead, Shannon cast some sort of location spell, and decided we were all going to the Cold Caves. This is a bad idea. Even if we find what we're looking for, we may be unprepared to deal with it.
More later, when we return.
-
Journeys and serendipity
I've heard it said that life is a journey - that the destination is less important than the process of getting there. Not having ended my journey yet, I probably don't know enough to say for sure on that… but I will agree that the journey is important.
I've also heard it said that life is what happens to you while you are making other plans. I don't know of anyone that is more true of than me.
A few things happened pretty much all at the same time, any one of which would have been good - but all together, the effect was magical.
Some months ago, Hirg and I found an injured woman wandering the northeast rawlins alone - the sole survivor of a caravan destroyed by goblins. Clarissa was her name, and we were able to get her back to the Sisterhood. If ever there was a woman in need, she was it. She wanted to repay us out of some of the caravan goods she'd managed to bring with her - Hirg was given some magical sling bullets and a nice sling (which I hope he is using to good effect now that he no longer thinks of them as rocks and a belt).
I'd just as soon have not taken anything, but Clarissa wouldn't take no for an answer. She had mentioned that she was a weaver and seamstress, so I hit on the idea of her making a dress for Raver - an idea to which Clarissa readily agreed. Sylvain was going to do a painting of Raver and I to replace the drawing he'd made - and I wanted Raver to have a nice dress for it.
I checked on Clarissa a few times to make sure she was all right, but the Sisterhood was taking care of her as I knew they would. I kept trying to get Raver there to be fitted for the dress, but there was never time.
A few days ago, I ran into Clarissa at the Jiyyd fire again - she had completed not one dress, but three... and would not take payment for the other two.
Rilia hosted a dinner yesterday, in honor of Hanali Celanil. I asked Raver to come, and showed her the dresses Clarissa had made. She asked me which of the dresses I wanted her to wear, and modeled them for me.
Woof.
She may not think so, but she looks pretty good to me in armor. In a dress... especially the one we decided on... I had to turn to hide my appreciation to keep it from embarrassing us both.
In the interim, I had gone to Pelt to get more flowers, and fell to talking with Lacey - who showed me the most amazing flower she was going to send to Damara to sell. Of course, I had to have it for Raver. The price Lacey asked wasn't easy given the time available - but definitely worth it.
Raver and I arrived a little early, and the dinner started late - and the other guests were all late on top of it, so Raver and I had a lot of time to just sit and talk (inside the festhall, since it was raining outside).
She'd said yes - but getting her to set a date was much harder. I'm still not sure what she was waiting for, but I made a crack about 'making an honest woman out of her' (which she was, of course, rumors to the contrary notwithstanding)... and she told me she'd marry me that night, if a willing priest could be found and Rilia didn't mind us taking over her dinner.
When I told her I would, she was just as stunned as I'd been earlier that day, when she'd joked about storing Flicker under the couch meaning I'd have to sleep with her...
I made sure Raver was willing to go through with it, and plowed ahead. A quick talk with Rilia and General Lyte later, we were ready to go, with the wedding scheduled after dinner.
Dinner was wonderful, and funny, and somehow I never got to drink my wine because it disappeared out of my glass...
...and the wedding was perfect. Everything came together like we had planned it - better than it would have if we had planned it, really. Serendipity.
Lyte, as a priestess of Mielikki, came up with a beautiful ceremony, Jeni came up from the Camp to make it legal and officiate if she was needed, and brought a new dress for Raver, Jerr sang before and after the wedding, and everything went without a hitch.
Some small part of me felt sorry for Alexi and Senria - they'd tried so hard to have a nice wedding in the same place and it went so badly.
We owe Hanali for this one - she must have been watching over us as Lyte performed the ceremony standing in front of her likeness.
From the well-wishers at the wedding, we went south back to the camp, escorted by our friends, and into Raver's home... our home now until we get the house built.
...both of us exhausted, and Raver looked as happy as I was.
As Lyte put it, two journeys become one.
-
Bargaining with evil
Finally had the meeting today. It went both better and worse than I expected.
A meeting in Oscura. Not so bad, I thought. I didn't really think about what a meeting in the Temple of Shar would mean. I'd never been in there. Rumor had it, the doors to the inner temple were protected, so I'd never tried them. The outer temple was oppressive, but not any worse than the one time I'd been there before.
The rumors were right, and I've got burns now that will take days to heal. I went back outside, waiting for the person who was supposed to have met me in the temple I could not enter.
After a brief time, someone came out to me at the well, and we went back in.
She opened the doors to the inner temple and motioned me in.
I'd been in evil temples before. Not really a new experience. What was new, was I wasn't there to kill everything and destroy the altar.
I got about five steps in before the realization hit of where I was and what I was doing. The place felt evil.
I guess I'd never been in an evil temple before that had been in long term, uninterrupted and active use. …or maybe it was just that I was going to leave it so. I almost turned and left right then... but then the doors closed behind me - the same doors that had burned me before.
Trapped now.
The guard captain came out to speak. I'd seen him before. Too late to back out now, and I have a mission, in any case.
We went to speak in an area holy to Shar. A place of complete darkness. The sense of evil was no less oppressive there, and I couldn't decide whether not being able to see made it better or worse.
The guard captain was to be the Agent's voice. He asked my purpose there... as if he did not know.
"I seek a death"
The words came perhaps too easily. A life on the table, its worth to be bargained over.
At the captain's prompting, I named the target.
I first knew I was in trouble when he said the price would be easier for me to meet than most.
Then he named it.
Your first born child, given over and dedicated to Shar
I'm sure the color drained from my face, though no one could have seen it in the darkness. …or maybe they could. My answer came without thinking. I hope to the gods it would have been the same if I'd had a chance to think first.
"No. Name another price or we are done here."
The Agent was apparently insulted at my refusal. The price named next was high. Higher than Shannon paid to buy off the orcs. Given the target, understandable.
I left then, with instructions on how to make payment.
The arrow is nocked, the bow aimed... all that remains is to see if the money can be found to make the archer let fly.
I never dreamed it would be like that. I feel dirty now. I just hope the feeling washes off.
-
Finally paid off my debt to Seer. That was the last of it. I am finally free.
Had a talk with Raver.
She ran into Yolande in Norwick - and Yolande said the incident in Jiyyd wasn't her. Was Yolande lying? Probably. Still, I need to be sure.
Tried to leave a message for Yolande at the Coppers, but they said she'd been gone for weeks.
Left one with Drelan, though I've no idea if it will reach her.
The one thing I know for sure is this can't be allowed to continue.
Two other important things happened last night.
First, I told Raver. It was an even bigger surprise to her than to me.
Before she recovered, I asked her… and she said YES!
Now, we have plans to make.
-
Fear, Fear again, and Three Words
Fear of death? No. Not my own, anyway.
I've been afraid before, though that was mostly restricted to a fear of people discovering I wasn't who they thought I was.
Aside from magical fear, where you completely lose control to a gibbering subconscious while the conscious mind is telling you to fight, that was about it, until today.
Today I discovered whole new reasons to fear.
Fear is something you don't feel unless there is something that the loss of matters. The most fearless man in the world is one who has nothing, and whose own life does not matter to him. There was a time when I was nearly that man - a time when nothing that could have been taken away from me mattered enough to be afraid about.
No longer.
Raver fell yesterday, fighting some sort of Well-spawned horror. I wasn't with her when it happened, but I was there when they brought her body back to Jiyyd. One look at her lifeless body was all it took for my heart to stop beating, and a claw of fear to clench in my bowels.
That claw stayed clenched the whole time until she was back and I heard her voice again, cursing the thing that had killed her. It wasn't until that moment that I knew she was all right.
I wish I'd been there, and told her as much. She said better not, as I'd have gone after her. She's right, I would have, and died too. I don't think that would have mattered to me, so long as we were still together.
Foolish. Surprising. I wasn't expecting to write that, but its true. Only truth here. Time for me to re-evaluate, after I finish writing, the three words I've never said to her.
Not long after Raver was raised, we stood inside Jiyyd's west gate, waiting for the drow to counterattack. I didn't expect them to. We were ready for them. The drow aren't foolish enough to attack that kind of force unless they can overwhelm it quickly.
Raver and I were talking quietly, joking and teasing as we do, and the gate opened. The breath caught in my throat as I watched Yolande walk in. She'd been angry before. More angry than I'd guessed at first - I heard about what happened to the hobs in the pass, after. That had to have been her handiwork. How would she react seeing Raver and I together?
At first, it was anticlimactic. She walked down the road past us, without acknowledging our presence. I didn't dare look at her when she passed behind us, and I don't think Raver even noticed she was there. The hair on the back of my neck was standing on end - I knew she was back there, and still didn't dare turn… and then it was over. Yolande passed us again, leaving Jiyyd. I didn't really start to breathe again until the gate closed behind her. Maybe there wasn't anything to be afraid of after all, and I'd simply misjudged her.
So I thought.
I turned back to Raver and at my quiet words, she wrapped her arms around my neck and kissed me - unusual for Raver in a crowd, but I'm not going to complain.... but then she asked - in Yolande's voice - if Raver kissed as well as she… and then she laughed.
I shoved her away and told her to stop - just as Raver came back to herself and began to answer the question I'd asked. Of course, Raver knew nothing of what had just happened, and misunderstood. A few heated words later, she stomed out the gate at a pace I couldn't match.
If I hadn't had a good stock of potions, things might have gone bad. As it was, I was able to catch her up and explain.
Once I talked her out of going after Yolande on her own, it came down to what to do next. I have some ideas for that, the first of which involves talking with Yolande - dangerous, but necessary. I need to try to resolve this before it gets worse.
. . .
Three words.
-
Death, death again, another chance
Its been a month or two since I last wrote. Much has happened, but I've been waiting for an answer from Raver before I wrote things down. I finally have my answer.
Starting from the beginning…
Ran into Cal taking a small group out to the Northeast Rawlins - there had been reports of a large undead.
The reports were correct.
The thing was undead to be sure, and huge. It reminded me a great deal of the huge undead we fought when the Little Lady was active.
Cal and I sent the others back to get help - there was no way they were going to be able to fight the thing.
I attacked the shaman controlling it and ran him off, while Cal tried to turn it.
It crushed him.
I got in and tried to fight it close up. Bad mistake. It almost killed me. I spent the next couple of hours running that thing around the Northeast Rawlins, filling it full of arrows. I don't know how many hundred arrows.
Finally, the Shaman came back. He stunned me before I could kill him, and the colossal zombie finished the job.
It was slow, stupid, easy to hit and damage... but trying to do any serious damage to it was like fighting a giant with a pin. You'll get there eventually, but its not something that's going to happen fast.
I had the thing hurt badly when I went down - but I understand it was healthy when the reinforcements finally arrived.
That means something healed it - and I don't think it was that shaman, based on the spells he was throwing.
I was raised in Norwick, along with Cal, Jeremy, and Serenity, who also fell either to the zombie or the horde of goblins that were there along with it when they arrived. Coming back has been getting easier. I don't feel like I belong on the other side anymore, and I don't remember as much of what happened after.
Later attempts to find where the thing was assembled or summoned have so far been unsuccessful.
Left a message for Raver, regarding her request to have Rom Guard training on the Long Road. The message was all business, but I included a few flower petals to remind her I hadn't forgotten.
Ran into Mord just south of the hob cave, just as a bunch of hobs came out of the cave to attack the Black Armbands on the bluff to the west of the cave. While the archers were busy with the frothers, a witchdoctor came out behind them and started tossing fireballs at the Black Armbands. Mord and I responded by putting a bunch of arrows in him, which he didn't appreciate at all. A few fireballs later, I was a little cooked, and Mord was down. I took a moment to get Mord back on his feet, and the witchdoctor ran back into the cave, proving he was smarter than the average hob.
After checking on the Rom Guard (who had apparently used whatever healing they had to good effect), Mord and I went south to see if we could find enough people to mount a raid on the hob cave. We found Wolf and Lady Tindra. A light group, but enough, barely... or so I thought.
Without a trapper, we bulled through the traps in the main hall, plowing through what opposition the Hobs set up, until we finished at their altar. I'd still like to know who that thing is to and what its for. It is far too elaborate for a simple place of worship.
Lady Tindra had to leave while we were on our way in, leaving us uncomfortably few, but we had still done well up to that point.
On our way out, we ran into a small hob army - a lot of which were the bigger ones. The fight went badly, and Wolf fell. I tried to get to him and almost died in the process. A potion of invisibility later, Mord and I were behind a stalagmite, trying to heal and drink what potions we could to make ourselves tougher. When we were done, it was time to hit the three remaining hobs with what we had before reinforcements showed up. ...at least that was the plan. The overlord, chief, and witchdoctor made short work of me, then went tearing after Mord as I fell.
The next thing I remember was being in Cera's tree, with Rilia handing me my things. Even out of it, it didn't take long to notice my sword, armor, and shield missing. Apparently, the hobs decided they would be useful. Wolf was missing a belt he'd made as well. The loss of the armor and shield were painful, but livable - the sword, I absolutely had to recover. It was while I was considering this, that Raver, correctly assessing that I'd recovered enough, moved forward and kissed me full on the lips.
I don't have the words to describe how I feel about that, still. I wasn't ready when I spoke with her. Would have said I wasn't still. Apparently some part of me decided that this was a good thing, for that stone in the rebuilding is now firmly set. I kissed her back.
We went back to the hob cave, recovered my sword and armor, and Wolf's belt, and got chased out by some demons.
Mord is still missing, and I'll put together some more folks to see if we can get him out of there.
She kissed me. Life is pretty good.
-
Finally had a talk with Raver.
Followed her out of Jiyyd, losing ground as always to that brisk, purposeful walk of hers.
I kept her in sight, as she was slowed down by the occasional hob. I know she knew I was there, but she didn't slow, stop, or acknowledge my presence - even when I feathered some of the hobs at a goodly range.
Not a particularly good sign.
I nearly caught up with her as she arrived home. …called out to her - and she closed and locked the door. I know she had to have heard me.
Definitely not a good sign.
I don't know if she has a back entrance or not. One way to find out.
I parked myself in one of the chairs in front of the fire, back to Raver's door. I knew I'd hear it open if she came out. Squeaky hinges that work well as a security method against intruders, work just as well to notify anyone waiting for you, that you intend to leave.
I sat for a while, basking in the fire's warmth, and listening to it pop and hiss.
Trying to think of what to say. Drawing a blank. I'm usually better prepared than this. I don't think fast, so I have to plan everything out ahead of time.
The door opens, cutting short my jitters. I hear Raver curse under her breath. She probably saw my arm on the arm of the chair. She doesn't miss much.
"Yes, I'm still here," I heard myself say. My voice sounded much calmer than I was. I got up and faced the doorway, faced Raver. "Raver, we need to talk."
She agreed after a moment, and invited me in for tea. Of course, that was the end of what I knew to say. From here on, it was just a question of trying to figure out how to say what needed to be said, while trying to figure out what that was, all the while ignoring the knot in the pit of my stomach that told me I was on the brink of screwing everything up. Simple.
I'd already screwed up one friendship over this. Lots of potential here to go two for two, and walk away alone. Nothing to be worried about. Sure.
I gave her a brick of tea I'd picked up, and we talked.
...about everything but what both of us knew was hanging out there.
Several times, the conversation could have swung that way, and she quickly changed the subject.
How long we talked, I've no idea. I know it was late, and we were both getting tired. A few more minutes, and I would find myself outside again, having lost my best chance.
I stood up, and gave her some flowers. She said she wasn't angry with me about Yolande. That I had the right to make my own decisions. I told her she might be angry...
Raver has thin walls. Someone began doing business with Shady, and we heard the conversation, though not who was speaking.
I dropped my voice to a whisper. Raver didn't need her personal business being spread all over Camp. Particularly if this didn't go well. I don't remember what I said next. None of it was planned. All of it was from the heart.
Apparently, it was also too soft for our eavesdropper, as she moved close enough to Raver's door for Raver to hear and catch her. Looking for Attentus, she said. Invisible, standing outside Raver's door. Mmm. Raver sent her away.
Raver asked about Yolande, and I explained I had broken things off a couple of days before.
It wouldn't have been fair to Yolande to be used as a fallback if things didn't go well when I talked to Raver, and it wouldn't have been fair to Raver to bring this up while I was still involved with Yolande.
I told Raver I was still kind of messed up, that I could make no promises on that basis, and that I would not ask for an answer right away. I asked her to think about it, and she said she would.
We left it at that, and she let me out.
Is it a good sign that she's thinking about it? Probably. Better than dismissing me out of hand, in any case. We will see what the future brings.
-
Finally decided what to do.
Sought out Yolande and had a talk with her. She didn't take it well.
I had thought that since it had been based on mutual need rather than on love, we would be able to amicably go our separate ways. Perhaps I was mistaken about how she saw that. She had said at the beginning that she believed I would move on eventually.
Scratch that - I was definitely mistaken.
She was obviously angry, but courteous, so in some respects one could say she took it very well.
I admit I was hoping for not angry.
I like Yolande, and I owe her, for helping me when I'm not sure anyone else could have.
I've apparently ruined what friendship we had. Not what I would have chosen, but as good as I am at giving others advice on their own affairs, I've always had a special talent for screwing up when it comes to my own. In this case, even after the fact I'm not sure what I could have done differently.
"At least you had the courtesy of telling me up front. I will remember that."
I have to admit that worries me slightly. Whatever immunity I may have enjoyed probably went away with those words.
Ah well. There's little to be done about it now. I would find a way to make it up to her if I could, but I can think of nothing that wouldn't make it worse.
The next thing I need to do is speak with Raver. The very idea of that is scary where the talk with Yolande wasn't. With Yolande, I knew what I was going to say, and I had faith in her choosing to not harm me.
With Raver… I have no idea what I'm going to say, and no idea how she will react. I'm not ready for this. I had planned to finish recovering before I even thought about love again, if ever - but as they say, life is what happens to you while you are making other plans.
-
Surprises, again.
My life seems to be all about surprises lately. Unexpected things coming from unexpected people.
Raver blowing up when I told her about Yolande was not entirely unexpected. Raver's been looking out for me for a long time, and she has always been as likely to figuratively take my head off for doing something dumb, as she has been to literally take the head off someone trying to hurt me. I figured Raver would be angry because Yolande had taken advantage of my mental and emotional state. She'd be right that Yolande had, but Yolande also gave back far more than she took. I hoped to make Raver understand that.
I expected the yelling. What she actually said is the reason why I stood staring, long after she had stalked off, once it penetrated.
I hadn't expected that from Raver.
Now what do I do?
-
Rebuilding
It has been months since I last wrote in this journal. Perhaps I was right about pain being my motivation to write. It was the ghost of remembered pain that made me sit down this time. A simple error in figuring the distribution of coin from selling loot, that had me distributing a fair amount of my own coin as well. It brought back old memories. Memories of father railing at me for being worthless as a merchant. Memories that used to hurt… used to affirm how worthless I was. Memories that no longer have any power over me.
When I burned down to ashes... when everything else was gone... the pain went with it.
Not right away, and not all at once - but it went.
When you've nothing left to lose, and no longer mourn what you once had - there is no longer any pain associated with the loss. When the facade that you show to the world is gone, there is no longer fear of it being exposed. When ancient hurts that left unhealed wounds are gone - that which kept the wounds from healing is gone too.
For a time after that, I felt nothing. No pain, no joy. If the pain of the wounds was gone, the wounds were still there. In time, I would have recovered from that on my own. Laying stones to rebuild myself, from the ruin of what I once was. Some of the stones, I choose to re-use. Others, I choose to discard. Some stones are new.
Recovering from it on my own... I don't know what I would have become if I had. All options were open depending on what stones I used to rebuild.
I could have taken back my pain and self-blame. Started back down the same path I had just left. As I had just proven, that is self-destructive. Still, in such a state, the choices one makes are not always the sensible ones.
I could have taken back my pain, and instead of self-blame, topped the pain with new stones of resentment and blaming others. That would have been the first step on a dark path. ...an easy path to take, as it neatly avoids responsibility. Simplicity itself to hate... to take revenge for slights real or imagined.
I was fortunate to have help. She was there from the beginning, knowing what I needed before I did myself. Knowing when to hold me up, and when to step back. ...and if she was very rarely a little too enthusiastic in praise seemingly intended to build confidence and encourage good behavior... perhaps that too was by design. ...a way of helping me realize that such was no longer needed. She's helped me rebuild. Never choosing the stones, nor even suggesting which should be chosen... just... there. At first, someone to fall back on, later, a comforting presence. Never more or less than I needed.
She asks for little in return: relief from loneliness. Relief she expects to be fleeting, as she believes I will eventually move on. I do not know if her belief is correct. I do know I do not love her. I have told her this, in response to her warning, and she acted as though she did not already know, relieved, not upset. I am not capable of such right now. The wounds do not pain me, but they run deep, and it will be long before they heal and I can consider love again. When that time comes, I do not yet know what stone I will set... whether I will keep relationships shallow, follow the path of the ascetic, or try again.
In the interim, I rebuild the remainder - a process much faster and easier with her support.
Other things have happened these last few months... things of small import and great. It hardly seems important to write of them, but I will, just so I can have a sense (if I read this later) of what else was happening when this was written.
Mielikki's White Stag is free.
Five words, so simple to say. So long in coming. So nearly a failure. So nearly an end, for I would have answered the Guardian's riddle incorrectly and been eaten had Penny not tricked me into moving away so Sara could answer. ...yet after it was over, I bore a new blade, named Mielikki's Chosen. The Stag had faith in me... She did too, to free the Stag. Somehow, despite everything, that faith was not misplaced. ...and so Mielikki has a stone of Her own in the rebuilding.
Del, Seer, and Selandra all fell, weeks apart, and each was difficult to bring back. Seer finally came back on her own somehow... changed. Selandra came back with her injury worse than ever, unable to walk. She'll be doing research at the Temple in Pelt. I am glad they're all back. Seer seems different - it remains to be seen if that is good or bad. Selandra, I feel responsible for - she was concerned about fighting trolls, and I told her it would be all right - but didn't warn her when the others decided to go to the cave, and I couldn't protect her when we ran into the troll horde. I'll take care of her as I can. Concern and empathy for friends. These stones too have their place.
The rebuilding continues. I still don't know what the end result will look like - but I am getting closer.
-
Luck
I've never really thought much about luck. Tymora was a goddes others prayed to, when they wanted a favorable toss of the dice, or for their hand to shake a little in an archery contest, giving them a better shot than they had a right to.
Granted, I've never had much luck - or rather, I have, but most of it has been bad. The worse my luck got, the less confidence I had in myself, and the more I let events control me, instead of the other way around. That right there should have been a clue, if I'd thought about it. I didn't of course.
So - my luck got worse. …and it kept getting worse.
That should have been a sign even an idiot could read. ..but not me.
Then, when things were about as bad as they could get... when I was paring down, giving things away, or just dropping them and walking away...
...I met her. She helped me first, in ways I didn't know I needed help.
When I was able to listen, she explained that bad luck happened to those who didn't have the will to find their own path - make their own way.
I didn't really understand then. Wasn't capable of it. She helped anyway.
...and my luck changed.
I didn't realize it at the time. Even bad luck like mine doesn't go completely unbroken by some good chance. ...but ever since, things have gotten better. Much better. That continued after we met again at the goblin attack in Norwick. I asked questions this time, and she answered. No hesitation, no hiding. Just straight answers. She's definitely not what one would expect.
I don't know what my path is yet, but I'm looking. Willing to take control.
..and if that, and a prayer and burning a bit of wine is what it takes for me to have "normal" luck, then so be it. All gods are jealous of their portfolios, and Lady Doom is surely no different. A simple acknowledgement of Her power... perhaps that is all She was after.
Jario just brought me an ale. No doubt he's curious as to why I've been spending so much time here. I'm sure he already knows. He's an observant sort, and I've made no effort to hide... well, not much effort.
He'd probably like to know what I'm writing, too. He'll have to guess on that. This isn't for his eyes. I've given only person permission to read this - and he isn't her.
-
Ashes and Surprise
At long last, it is done. There is little left of what I was - only ashes.
…and yet, I remain.
I have tasks yet to complete. Tasks which I can do little with, as I am waiting on others to do their part. The ashes that remain are sufficient for that.
...but then what?
I don't know the answer to that question.
What will rise from the ashes?
I don't know that answer either.
What I do know is that sometimes you look at something or someone and dismiss it after, since you know what to expect to find when you look there.
...and that what you expect to find can blind you to what is actually there when you look again.
When that happens, you can be surprised by something you were looking straight at all along, because you never actually saw it.
This lesson I know from the wilds - but I never thought to apply it elsewhere until now.
I have been surprised, from a place I was looking straight at. All that remains to be seen is how well I will deal with what happens next. I know better now than to hope for anything good to come of it, and will have to beat down any glimmers of such before they ruin me. We will see what of the ashes survive.