Bard No More
-
The best writing is deeply felt.
Great stuff Zyph.
-
Another good chapter..
hugs
-
I love it,
I love it,
I love it.
It sends chills down my spine.
Poor Zyphlin…
-
Dust in the wind, all we are is dust in the wind
Dust in the wind, everything is dust in the wind._I close my eyes, only for a moment, and the moment's gone
He closed his eyes, feeling the cool crisp air flow over his body and through his long hair. He stood upon a hill he had been upon three decades earlier, looking out over the city he had looked at for the first time all those years ago. For a moment he thought back to that beautiful spring day, which he later realized was his first step to a possible real, honest, good life. But suddenly the crisp wind send a shiver down his spine, opening his eyes and making him realize that those times were now long gone.
_All my dreams, pass before my eyes, a curiosity
He moved away from the hill, continuing down the path to the capital of one of the greatest human civilization on Faerun. As he walked his mind wandered, thinking of all the different dreams that first started within his city. It was here that he first realized he would leave the Elven courts, that he would try to live a real life and grow old and have a family and be happy. All due to one little girl that spurred the change within him. However those thoughts felt so odd, so foreign now.
_Dust in the wind, all they are is dust in the wind.
Perhaps they were foreign, for did he not realize now he had all but killed the man that had those dreams. He saw the image of the poor boy from Hillsfar that he held in his arms. The child which was the death proclamation of the Zyphlin Re'cual that was. Yes, those dreams were foreign, for they belonged to another now.
_Same old song, just a drop of water in an endless sea
He entered into the city now, seeing the bustling streets, the noises and smells of a city the size of Suzial. He had almost forgot what a city this size felt like. He walked along the streets stoically as he tried to find an inn for the night. He entered into one and upon entering it his heart jumped to his throat. A local bard within was having the majority of the bar busting a gut at a rather hilarious, though vulgar, song that he had known all to well. He heard another’s voice singing that familiar song and it hit him like he had just ran head first into a wall. He closed his eyes, took a breath, and continued on despite the desire of his feet to leave. It was just another song, like any other, it had no meaning, no memories associated with it, he assured himself of that.
_All we do, crumbles to the ground, though we refuse to see
He tried to stay with those assurances he was making himself think, but a sharp pain had swelled within him. As he walked through, hearing that song, his thoughts went past the last year or so within his old home. All the hints, all the clues, all those gut feelings that would have let him see the reality of what was happening in his life, yet he was to blinded by his love to realize it.
_Dust in the wind, all we are is dust in the wind
And in the end it was his downfall. How things would've been different if he would've simply realized those clues. But he didn't, he continued on, and due to that all the things he had worked for in Narfell, all the possibilities seemed to have just blown away.
_Now don't hang on, nothing lasts forever but the earth and sky
He got his room and headed up to it wordlessly. He reached his room, slipping his top off and undoing the his weapons belt. He moved over to his bed, taking the dagger he had recovered from the vile cultists into his hand. He laid down upon the bed mesmerized by the razor sharp blade as he twirled it between his hands. He laid there now, a shell with no soul, no purpose, no person within. He had let the man that was within die and vanish but now, as his cold lifeless blue eyes followed the movements of the dagger, he realized that even that was pointless alone. Perhaps it was fate that the city he had started down the path to a new life in would also be the city he would take his final steps in as well.
Dust in the wind, all we are is dust in the wind_______
-
Indeed, very nice story.
-
Wow..
That is such a good story, you are an amazing writer.
-
Nice story Zyphlin. Very nice.
-
_I feel irrational
So confrontational
To tell the truth I am
Getting away with murder“Come now gather round gather round. I’m going to tell you all a story about the great wizard Elminster. Elminster of Shadow Dale they call him. Most powerful wizard in all of faerun! Well, kind of…I mean Manshoon was pretty strong I guess and the Simbul is legendary, and then there’s Szass...oh there I go getting myself carried away.”
In the background the sound of bird pipes, just passingly able to be called “music”, begins to rise.
“Anyways, getting back to what I was saying, this is a story of the great mage of Shadow Dale. Now you see this big evil warlord guy had taken over this city. And all these people in the city were hating it and being like ‘we don’t like this warlord’. And they complained and they fought back but of course no warlord doesn’t have an army, so when they started complaining the warlords army went and killed them all dead. Well, finally one got word to Elminster and him and his harper buddies came into that town and were like ‘hey, you can’t just come here and take over and kill people’. And the people all cheered....”
Zyphlin finished the last half of his wine wincing at the story and the horrible scraping sound of the bird pipes. By gods nothing was worse then bad art. He’d rather see all the bards of this world die off then see them all become as crap as this one. He put in an order for another of the fine red elven wine and sat there a moment as the old bard droned on.
“So zap went Elminster’s wand of electrifying doominess and the guards shook all jittery when it hit them and...”
He felt like walking over and just telling the man to shut up, to close his damn yap and he’d get more applauds then he’d likely get if he finished the story. And then he’d want to look over to the twit playing the bird pipes and threaten to break it in half if he didn’t make that sound akin to the scraping of a sword against stone stop. And as these thoughts passed his head he paused a moment, a pain deep within him hitting. What was he saying, what was he thinking. There was a time he would’ve looked upon the good in these things. The way the musician at least had a good rhythm and just needed to practice his notes. Or how the wordslinger just needed to do a better job of keeping on point and using a bit more eloquent language. But he battered those thoughts back, letting them linger only for a moment. That was his old self, that was Zyphlin Re’cual, bard of the Peltarch Theater and protégé to the legendary Adam Bromley. That Zyphlin may’ve gave a damn, may’ve wanted to help the bards. This one simply wanted to make the agonizing sounds end.
The serving wench came out with his wine and he took it gladly, taking a small sip as he stood. He had enough of the bar and figured being alone with his thoughts in his room was better then being amongst others here with these two bards. He realized now why some people stated that silence was golden.
He turned to leave, putting down a few gold for his drinks, and headed towards the door. However as he turned to leave a rather large drunken man stumbled into him, spilling some of his wine onto his tunic. His hand darted to his side, grasping the hilt of the rapier there.
“Hey there, sowwrie bout that mista. hiccup Dedn’t see yah standin dere.” He laughed drunkenly, clubbing Zyphlin along the shoulder in a rather hard but friendly manner. However the moment the hand hit his shoulder Zyphlin’s hand went out, hitting straight into the drunken man’s sternum. The drunk stumbled back and toppled over a table, falling to the ground with a loud crash. A few people’s head quickly toward to the situation but Zyph was already hidden under his cloak with the dweamor of his armor around him, staying low and moving quickly unseen out of the bar and towards his inn.
Along the way he heard a young kid calling over to him, trying to flag him down. “Mister! Hey mister! Got a gold you can spare for a poor boy down on his luck and needing a smile from Tymora?” The kid smiled up to him, his hair shaggy and dusty, his clothes ragged save for a small copper coin with the symbol of Tymora upon it.
“Get going kid. Find someone else to smile on you, I don’t have any hand outs.”
“How about a game of chance then mister? I’ll flip a coin and if its heads you give me a few gold and if its tales I’ll give you all I got in my bag. How about that? Fair bet right, you look like a betting man?”
“If I look like a betting man to you maybe you should take what you got in that bag of yours and visit the local cleric to cure your sight. Take your game of chance somewhere else and leave me be.”
The kid looked up at him a bit longer then gave a sigh, wandering off to ask someone else. Zyphlin continued on down the road, sipping his wine and ignoring the things around him, simply wanting to get to his inn. His keen ears heard the kid ask the same line of questions to someone else and he heard something else. A threat to the kid? Something about just taking what’s in the bag? He shook his head saying to himself, “Just my ears playing tricks on me, and even if not, its not my problem.”
He entered the inn, climbing the stairs to his room as he ignored the “hello” from the person at the front. He opened his door and dropped his bag and belt at the side of the bed before falling upon it, staring up to the ceiling. He let his eyes droop and close, ready to call it an early night, when he heard a scream come through his window. He bolted to his feet, scooping up his weapon belt and strapping it around him as his muscles went on edge. Was it the kid? “Couldn’t be” he thought, “you’re just getting yourself worked up. Sit down and let the guards do their job.”
He sat back down, not undoing his belt but just sitting a moment as his mind argued with itself. The voice protested, urging him to stay, to ignore the happenings but in the end his feet ignored his mind and out the inn he went. They took him down the alleys of the city quickly, moving silently along the shadows that had became his dearest friend in those past tendays...well, the shadows and the wine.
As luck would have it his feet traced their way back near where he met the boy. He slowly moved forward, the cloak over his head, into an alley near by. His eyes caught sight of a mass on the ground and quickly moved over to find the boy there, beaten and pummeled to death. He feel to his knee’s and heard the chink of his coin pouch, filled with hundreds of platinum. That damning sound reverberated through his mind as he looked at the poor young lad. The robbers took the small little bag he had and were so greedy for wealth they even swiped the kids copper necklace. Zyphlin moved his fingers to the child’s open eyes and gently closed them. He looked down at the murdered child and heard the chinking of his money...money he so greedily kept to himself for no real reason...and in that child he saw himself, or at least the self he knew in Narfell. It was then he realized that he had done to that old self what those thugs had done to this child.
He felt a tear down his cheek and tasted the salty taste of them on his lips. It was then he realized he was crying, for the first time since the downward spiral of his life started those tenday ago. He sat on there in that alley, holding the dead child, and let the pain of it all finally come out._
-
_Its easier to run,
Replacing the pain with something numb.
Its so much easier to go,
Then face all this pain here all aloneHe left Hoarsgate that night, the words of the half-elf haunting him as they played over and over in his head; “You’re a fool that lies to himself.” Could it be true, could the man have seen so clearly into him. Was this flight unnecessary? He shook his head, clearing his mind and continued on.
It didn’t matter, that’s what he told himself. Rather it was lying to himself or not it didn’t matter, because it was just another lie on top of dozens. Lie or not he needed to get away from this land, to get away from the feelings and the pain. He had went slow at first, the bit of ties still pulling against him like the strings of a marionette. But now the need to flee increased within him. The longer he stayed the more the memories tried to pry back into his head he had tried so hard to shut tight.
The pain caused by the woman…no, by the man, he could not truly hold the grudge against her but him, he was the one that took all away from him...was more then he had ever felt. More then any wizards fire or swordsman’s blade, deeper then the truest arrow and more lasting then a ogres dart. Nothing he tried to do made the pain go away. No amount of logic, of rationalizing. No amount of anger or sorrow. All he tried to cope with it seemed to do nothing to quell the flood of emotions. And so he did all he could think of, he went back to his training. He went back to shutting down all the emotions within himself and let him go back to being a tool.
But a tool unused begins to degrade, and he was realizing that the defense from the pain would not go on much longer with how he was. So he picked up his pace, paying a large sum...as well as using a certain weapon useful for slaying lycanthropes, or so people joked...to acquire a horse with magically enchanted shoes.
He had to just reach Cormyr. Once there he could get in contact with his home and arrange a portal back. They would take him openly, he knew as much. Ever since their acceptance of his retirement he could see in their eyes that they knew this day would come. The sarcastic glee hiding behind their dull eyes as he had said his intent. Mocking him, laughing at him as he spoke, teasingly saying “you will be back.” At the time he thought they were wrong...but it seemed now that their wisdom was greater then he thought.
Spurring his horse on he sped forward with hopes of being out of Damara by day break._
-
So pardon me while I burst
Into some flames
I’ve had enough of this world
And its peoples mindless gamesHe was on his third glass of elven wine, savoring the taste and the small feeling of release it gave him. The inn had been growing in activity steadily over the past hour but he didn’t rightly care. He sat near the middle of the inn and there was not a table next to him that had a single person at it. No one rightly knew the man, but the general consensus of most of the patrons that night was to avoid the man like the plague itself.
It was for this reason that Zyphlin was so surprised when the half-elf came over, sat across from him, and ordered an ale.
The half-elf looked him over for a moment, smiling through the goatee so profoundly showing off the human part of his heritage, and scratched his chin a bit as he looked about for a moment. The wench was out with his ale then and he took it with a smile, leaning back as he fixed the collar on his tunic, and took a nice long swallow of the ale.
Zyphlin watched all this, without much of a care at first but with growing curiosity as the man didn’t leave. “Can I help you with anything?”
“The real question is is there anything I can help you with Mr. Re’cual.”
“Well aren’t you just a little fount of information. Well the answer to the question is 'no' but, knowing that men that randomly sit down at the table of someone that is basically a stranger to them generally have a reason for doing it, I’m going to guess that answer doesn’t matter to much. Which in that case, just call me Zyph.”
“Alright Zyph, fair enough. And since you seem to be a straight enough shooter I’ll level with you as well. I got a message from a few friends in Narfell to ask you to reconsider this little course of action you seem to be doing.”
“Nice to know some care, but whatever you’re going to say isn’t going to matter much. I’ve made up my mind and I’m following my course.”
“But why? So the bitch scr-”
“Use the word for her once more and you will suddenly be missing certain parts that will make you fit the definition of it just as well.”
The half-elf gave a little chuckle. “Fair enough. Either way, as I was saying. So your woman screwed around on you, so what? People have had it happen to them for years now. They say the oldest institution in Faerun is that of marriage, and they say the oldest sin is adultery. Gods know you’ve had to have worse done to you before? You’re leaving a place you could do some real good at. Hells, they said you were on your way to becoming senator of a city desperately needing another good soul in the government. So why go to this extreme over some girl.”
Zyphlin simply looked at the half-elf, his face cold and impassive. His ice eyes emotionless as he listened to the little speech that he guessed was supposed to get him to come back. “There is more to this then any of the people that considered what they saw of me a friend will probably ever know. I was living a life that was a lie, was trying to play a pointless game that I was doomed to lose since the beginning. I was a fireball with a delay upon it and it was just waiting for the proper time to blow. I tried to ignore the little tiny red bead floating in my head, to ignore the fact that in the end something would come crashing down, but in the end you can’t ignore that which is there.”
“So that’s it? All you did the past decade? All that you could do for decades later? All of that and you’re just walking away because of some abstract bullshit?”
“No. I’m tired of playing the games. The good I could do is no more and probably even less then anyone else there could do. I was a fake that could never truly play his part. I finally got burnt for trying, there’s no reason to keep playing.”
The half-elf simply shook his head, the jovial smile of earlier slipping away “Well, I have to say, you’re nothing like what your friends told me you’d be.”
“I’m not the same man they knew.”
“So it seems. You want me to tell them anything?”
“Tell them I’m sorry, and I’ll miss them. And tell them to be the hero’s I had hoped I could someday be.”
“You still can.”
“A lie can’t be a hero, no matter the great things they do.”
“And you are a lie?”
“Yes.”
The half-elf shakes his head. “No, you’re not a lie. You’re a fool that lies to himself. You have it in your head that the past is what defines a person. That there is some thing inside you or about you that is so horrible and so you had to play some part like an actor in a play. Well guess what. Life isn’t a play, and how you act isn’t a part. Its who you are. Maybe you acted differently then you used to, maybe you lived your life in a different way, but that doesn’t mean it wasn’t you. It means you changed, you learned, you grew. Its called humanity. The only reason you think you were living a lie is because you want to believe it. You say you’re done with games but you play one with yourself now.”
Zyphlin looked at the half-elf a moment, the cold blue eyes taking him in as he processed the words. Could it be true, could this man he’d never known in his life see right through him that easy? He didn’t think so but still…
“Any other fancy little speeches you feel like giving me or can I finish my wine and get some sleep before the sun actually comes up?”
The half-elf gave a little sigh and then chugging down the last quarter of his ale he stood. “Just think on what I said. I’ll tell your friends what you wanted me to, but I doubt they’ll accept it. They’re a persistent bunch.”
Zyphlin didn’t respond aside from simply taking a sip of the wine. The half-elf shrugged, putting the mug back onto the table and fixing his collar again, and walked to the door.
-
Sometimes I remember the darkness of my past,
Bringing back these memories I wish I never had._He walked down the road that day with a smile on his face though he had a tinge of sadness in his heart. He hated to leave, to go away from that smiling face he had grown to love so much. That little spark that set him in this direction. But he knew he had to go. He had waited for to long already, longer then he normally would’ve allowed himself. But then she had a way of making him do things he would’ve scoffed at in the past.
Lathander’s light was shining down upon him that day, warming him to his bones and lighting his path. Yes, he had waited a bit to long but maybe for the better. “After all,” he thought, “traveling under a great day like this when the sun looks like Tymora’s very own coin is better then trudging out through the rain that was present the past few days.”
He pulled out a coin, flipping it high into the air as he watched little gleams of light reflect off it. Catching it he quickly sent it back up, walking a bit while flipping the coin, taking in the gorgeous terrain all around him. Rolling hills of the brightest green, the smell of spring floating upon the air, the azure colored sky’s with majestic birds soaring over head. He noted one in particular, a dark golden colored falcon swooping through the air. He gave a small smile, nodding pointlessly up to the animal in a strange form of mutual respect, then reaching to his side he produced the fine silver flask given to him by his elven mother before departing Evermeet. He brought it to his lips and took a quick swig. Just as the sweet evermead touched his lips though a blinding pain shot through him, ripping through his body and bringing his hairs on end.
“Zander, Zander, Zander,” the man let forth a small snicker from behind him, “I can’t begin to express how wonderfully glad I am to see you this day.”
He realized then that the lightening bolt that struck his body had laid him flat on his stomach. “Gods, why hadn’t I heard him. Why hadn’t I been more aware.” He shut himself up quickly, it was no time to let his mind go flying like that and more so he knew exactly why this happened and it was his own fau-
A boot came down hard on his back, breaking his thoughts and knocking the bit of air he managed to get back in. The mage smiled down wickedly, seeing the meddling mercenary underfoot.
“How I tittered when I saw you were still here. I had thought I had lost my chance for at least getting revenge upon you for all the trouble you caused. But no…I guess luck was in MY favor this time you snot nosed whelp. You may’ve stopped my rise to lichdom and the crown, but you will not deprive me of the pleasure of at least ending your miserable meddling life.”
He heard the wizard beginning to cast and knew he only had one shot to get through his. He felt the stirring of the caster upon him, going through the delicate movements of the arcane. The moment the pressure relented he rolled, throwing the mage off balance slightly, and kipped up. Spinning to face the mage, rapier coming free from the sheath, he caught the faint smell of sulfur. Springing to the side into a roll the fireball launched from the caster across from him singed the ends of his cloak but nothing more. He was up in an instant, sprinting diagonally away, trying to gather himself, scolding himself for waiting so long.
“Run all you want, you look like nothing more then a frightened deer mercenary. All the running will do you no good. When this day ends I assure you I will have ceased your feet for good.”
“If you want me shut your mouth and let’s be done with this! You know, you’re a lot of damn talk for a guy that just had a ‘snot nosed whelp’ ruin a decade’s worth of planning. You got lucky with the lightening bolt when I wasn’t looking, you should’ve made good on your one chance.”
Just then five bolts of magical energy slammed into him. He turned into the bolts, taking them with a small grunt and closed eyes, then darted for the mage muttering to himself. “Maybe I should’ve taken my own advice.”
Trying to stall the charging mercenary the wizard pulled forth a fiendish wolf from an extra planar realm. However he had the mage in his sights and was going to make sure this ended here and now. The wolf leapt at him, claws and maw out front ready to take him. In a blink he stopped, twisting at the waist and knees and lowering himself just out of reach of the leaping wolf. Stabbing up with his rapier the fine blade pierced the gut of the wolf, its momentum sending the blade along its underside. He was standing and charging again at the mage before the wolf fully realized that its life was just ended.
The distraction was enough for the wizard though. Hands moving quickly, working the weave, he sent forth a specter of dread at the charging mercenary. The magic struck, but the mercenary continued forward to the sudden horror of the mage.
“How?!”
“I’ve live each night with worse nightmares then you will ever be able to conjure forth”
He drove forward then, rapier leading, aimed squarely for the neck of his foe. The mage got his staff before him, turning the blade away. The mercenary didn’t relent though, bringing the sword back to bare he continued the assault to the mage, taking advantage of his inexperience with such melee. Slowly he played the defenses of the mage like a bard would a lute, plucking at the openings, teasing it, setting him up. Finally he saw his opportunity, feinting out wide to left. The block from the staff came as he had expected and set for, letting the extra force take his blade and assist his movement as he spun, bringing the blade with him in blinding speed. He stabbed up, coming in to the right of the mage now, as the tip of the rapier pierced through his side straight into his heart. He stood there, seeing the shocked look of the mage as blood begin to bubble to this mouth. Pulling the rapier free he let the mage drop, looking down upon him as the battle lust finally began to subside. With weak knees he turned as the mages eyes closed. He had waited to long, but he got lucky...he wouldn’t make the mistake again. It was time to leave.
“It...can’t end...like this.”
He turned as he began to speak, “I don’t really give half a shit if you like how its en-”
His eyes caught the black aura growing around the mage. Noticed the hands, badly shaking yet moving swiftly all the same, spinning the spell. The aura coalesced into a single sphere and shot forth, striking the mercenary in the chest. The pain was worse then he’d ever experienced. He fell to his knees as he felt like the dark magic was wrenching his soul from him. He saw the mage give one last cold dieing laugh and then the world went black._
“Sir. Sir! Here’s the elven wine you ordered….is everything okay?”
He looked up, seeing the pretty young bar wench with the glass. He shook the thoughts form his head, not realizing he had zoned out so much. He quickly flashed a dashing smile to the young lass and gave a small charming chuckle. “Sorry, mind was just wandering a bit. Thank you for the glass though beautiful, how much do I owe you?”
The young lass’s cheeks went crimson and she gave a little smile “Don’t worry about it, its just such a change to get a nice polite customer in here. If you need anything else you let me know okay?”
“Of course love, this should do for now though.”
She went off beaming. He could hear the laughter as she relayed what happened to the other wenches back in the kitchen. He didn’t really care though. He let the smile fade and took a sip of the wine, closing his eyes, and returning to his thoughts.
-
_And be a simple kind of man,
Be something, you love and understand
And be a simple kind of man,
Won’t you do this for me son, if you can“Come sit beside me, my only son
And listen closely to what I say.
And if you do this
It will help you some sunny day.”He let the words roll off his tongue, the notes of the melody breaking through the crisp morning air. His mind raced as he sang, not truly even aware he was there. His fingers moved unconsciously, strumming the cords he had put together causing a sweet sound to escape the yarting.
“Take your time… don’t live too fast,
Troubles will come and they will pass.
Go find a woman and you’ll find love,
And don’t forget son,
There is someone up above.”He had slept horribly the night before, the dreams finally returning and even worse then usual. Now along side the hundreds of crying faces that accompanied his sleep each night was a new face, the one person who had ever managed to allow himself to break through those dreams he had had for near five decades now. And in her arms was held a child, looking at him, and with a face so unchildlike it chilled him. The newborns eyes were filled with intellegence and it watched him, smiling the wickedest smile ever to grace the face of man. And its eyes met his and it laughed, and its laugh rose higher then all the cry’s of agony and betrayal coming from the normal residents of his dreams.
“Forget your lust for the rich man’s gold
All that you need is in your soul,
And you can do this if you try.
All that I want for you my son,
Is to be satisfied.”He had wrote the song the night after she told him the news. He awoke that morning, stretched, and then stopped for a moment, simply looking at the wall in utter shock. It was then he realized that he had slept the night without a single dream. He had slept without a single old face haunting him, accusing him, condemning him. For the first time in fifty years Zyphlin Re’cual had been free to sleep the sleep of a man at peace. He went off into the hills he knew so well now, and looking at the sunrise over the Icelake he had let his heart come out on paper.
“Boy, don’t you worry… you’ll find yourself.
Follow you heart and nothing else.
And you can do this if you try.
All I want for you my son,
Is to be satisfied.”He had hoped to give it to Gildor once he had finished it. He hoped it would cheer her up a bit. He didn’t understand at the time why she seemed so off set by it all, though originally he just chalked it up to the shock of things. He wanted badly to tell her that his dreams had left him, that she had helped him finally move beyond his past, but he waited. He wanted to finish the song for her first. Now he sat, staring off into a sunset like the day he had wrote it. He felt a tear roll down his cheek but continued all the same, his voice steady and his fingers spiderlike.
“And be a simple kind of man.
Be something you love and understand.
Be a simple kind of man.
Won’t you do this for me son,
If you can?”Finishing the song he closed his eyes, clenching his hands slightly as he sat the yarting down. Taking the papers from his bag he looked at them a moment, his eyes seeming as if they would burn straight through the paper, and then finally ripped it in half and sent the pieces to float forever amongst the debris of the Icelake. He sat, looking over the side, and let his hands move to the yarting. With the ease of a practiced professional he unstrung the magical instrument. Standing he moved back to his room, a bard no more._
-
_Life it seems, will fade away
Drifting further every day
Getting lost within myself
Nothing matters no one else
I have lost the will to live
Simply nothing more to give
There is nothing more for me
Need the end to set me freeLost.
For the first time in his life Zyphlin Re’cual felt truly and fully lost.
He looked out over the side of the ship as the icy blasts of the wind come up off the frozen lake to spray harshly against his face. Still, he remained, looking off the side, looking back to the city he had turned his back on. The life he had turned his back on. He turned his head, looking off the other way. To the west, but beyond that he felt nothing but
Lost.
His mind went to all those he had met that past decade. The friends, the brothers, even the common folk, but not the lovers. He couldn’t bring himself to think of those just yet. The many battles beside soon to be legendary warriors on the hill outside Peltarch, the nights of stealthing through the cold caves with the greatest of shadow walkers in Narfell, the nights of song and story out by the fire in Norwick. The nights of drinking in the Mermaid and talking with Talgrath or the days of sitting in the commons talking politics. The thoughts all swam through his head as he looked over the side, ignoring the crewmen around him as he sat, thinking and realizing that all those memories were now
Lost.
He had strived to find his redemption. To move on past the horrors of his past, the ill deeds no matter the reason they were done, and live the one life he ever truly wanted; a real life, a human life, a happy life of good. It finally seemed to be coming together, everything working out. He would’ve won the senate race, at least one seat, he was almost sure. He had so many wonderful friends. He had thought he was to be a father. He was ready to have become the husband to a woman he loved dearly and showed him how wonderful a real life could be and how one could move beyond what they used to be. But that lesson she taught him by her actions was shattered in one fail stroke, he was broken in one fail stroke, and all those dreams were now simply
Lost_