((OOC Note - I will be leaving town on May 1st to the 15th for my friends' wedding, and I won't have regular access to the internet during this time. As such, I will only be able to post a couple more times as Djarin before I have to wrap up this leg of his epic journey. Enjoy.))The castle was alive with energy. Survivors of the recent cataclysms had flocked to the relatively dry safety of Alerions' fortress. The courtyard entrance was crowded with frenzied citizens, their clothes matted and their skin filthy. Guards mingled with these commoners, bellowing out orders and sending people to the crowded castle quarters.
A spirit pushed through the crowd, hollering at each person it passed by. "Help! Hey, you, help!" The spirit pounded violently on the head of a guard, who completely ignored his efforts. "Why won't you listen?!" The spirit clenched the mans shoulders, trying to shake him, but the guard simply walked away as if nothing was happening.
The spirit noticed Djarin looking at him and rushed over to the Seer. "You! I saw you watching! You can see me?" Djarin made a point of looking away, but the spirit swept in front of his view. "Hey, stop that. You can see me, can't you?"
Djarin sighed. "Yes, I can."
Blend gave him a quizzical look. "Excuse me?"
Djarin shrugged and motioned at the spirit. "It's talking to me."
"Of course I'm talking to you!" cried the spirit, its face cracking into a wide grin. "And you can hear me! I've been here for three days, THREE DAYS, looking for someone to talk to! Finally! Ohh, you need to help me."
"Help?" Djarin didn't have time for this. "I have to see the king. There's not much time, sorry. You will have to find your help elsewhere."
The ghost groaned. "Time? You don't have time?! My sister has been pinned under a beam of wood for three days, dying from thirst, and you don't have time! Well, let me tell you, I won't leave you with one moment of rest until you help."
--
The spirit was true to his word. Everywhere Djarin went, the ethereal ghost was there, screaming at the top of its lungs, twirling in the most outlandish dances, slapping the faces of each person Djarin talked to. The Seer was finding it nearly impossible to focus with the persistent ghost bothering him at every opportunity.
The spirit had busied himself with urinating on a guard, sending ghostly rivers of liquid running down the mans leg. Djarin chuckled.
"Ok, ok, you've made your point," Djarin offered towards the spirit. The ghost grinned towards him, hitching up his trousers.
"I don't think the guard minded much," the spirit chuckled.
"If he knew a ghost was pissing on him, I think he'd mind."
Blend looked at him and laughed. "Interesting spirit you've got there, lad."
"You don't know the half of it." Djarin grinned, then looked to the spirit. "Tell me then, what's your problem. Let's see if I can help."
"Like I said before," the spirit said, straightening up. "My sister Aisha has been pinned beneath a wooden beam. No one can hear her, besides she's stopped screaming - I think she's unconscious. I can't help her.. I was a guard, but I was killed by the tidal wave. I couldn't get back in time.."
Djarin couldn't focus. The name Aisha brought back too many memories. Memories of sand. Memories of love. Memories of pain.
--
A decade ago, in the distant deserts of Heruin, Djarin had been a young and lustful boy of fifteen. The sun hadn't burned cracks into his olive skin, and youth radiated from his flesh in waves. It was in this lost time that Djarin had met his lover.
According to Tral tradition, a man and a woman cannot even touch each other until they are married. To get wed, the fathers of both parties must agree on the coupling. Even then, the husband-to-be would have to pay a dowry as an offer for the bride, and the dowry was often worth more than a lifetimes share of toil. Thus, marriage was a difficult and long process, designed to slow the quickening heartbeats of the young and eager.
When Djarin had met Aisha, he fell into maddening desire instantly. Her skin was smooth as glass, a rich olive shade, and her eyes were an exotic green. Her cheekbones were proud and prominent, and a pair of luscious pink lips rested above a perfectly round chin. When she smiled towards him, Djarin felt his heart stop, stutter, and then start again at twice the tempo.
They had spent weeks together, honoring the traditions of the Tral. No contact, and a respectful distance at all times. Moreover, they had to have an adult male in their presence at all times, preferably someone from her family, to further ensure no impure actions occurred. But as the weeks melted into months, their closeness drove them to steal precious moments away from the Tral clan, where they would sneak out into the desert behind the camps and spend the nights talking about their forbidden ambitions.
Like him, Aisha resented the old traditions, traditions which seemed designed to quell their burning passion. When they spent these hours alone, they held each others hands, and stared into each others eyes as they lay in the sand. The closeness, the contact, was so potent that Djarin waited each day with eagerness for their next chance alone.
One fateful night, the couple found themselves alone in the desert like so many nights before. Djarin had brought a blanket, and the cloth was spread out on the warm desert floor. The pair lay together, their eyes locked, not speaking. A gentle breeze of wind brushed against Aishas' face, running ethereal fingers over her ebony hair.
"I could stay like this forever," Djarin said. It wasn't an uncommon sentiment, one he probably said each night.
Aisha sighed. "If only.. My father is growing suspicious.."
"Why should we care? Our love is between us."
Aisha giggled, her eyes twinkling in the moonlight. "I love when you talk like that. You sound so angry!"
Djarin cupped her cheek in his. "I just don't want this to end.."
Aisha leaned forwards and planted a gentle kiss on his lips. "It doesn't have to. Not tonight.."
Djarin watched in surprise as her robes slid from her shoulders and her nude form climbed onto him. What followed is best left to your imagination.--
Their bodies entwined, the wind whispered against their nude skin, chilling beads of sweat. Their eyes were locked, their lips inches apart. Djarin smiled.
"I love you, Aisha."
"I know," she whispered. "Now we'll always have this night."
A loud crash started Djarin as the mammoth figure of Aishas' father came barreling out of the encampment. The man had been spying on them for several seconds now from the shadows of a tent, and he charged towards them with murder in his eyes. Aisha quickly clutched her robes to her naked body, her eyes wide with fear, as the man strode straight to Djarin and struck him full across the face with a closed fist.
Stars blotted across his vision as Djarin took the blow. His eyes swimming, he looked up at the man as he swung again, pounding agony against his temple. The man raised his fist to swing a third time, but someone restrained him - Djarins' own father, Achtel.
"Stop!" Achtel hissed angrily, struggling to restrain the infuriated father. "Let the clan decide their punishment."
The attacker went limp, no longer struggling against Achtels' restraints. "Very well," the man spoke venomously. "Get your clothes on, boy. Meet us at the bonfire. I'll take this.. whore
.. to her tent." The man grabbed Aishas' wrist and yanked her to her feet, half dragging the crying girl towards the Tral encampment while Djarin and his father stared after them.
--
The proceedings that followed were viciously blunt. According to Tral tradition, defiance of the teachings earned punishment for both parties involved. For the man, banishment into the desert for two moons. For the woman, she would be married into another Tral clan without dowry, and never see Djarin again.
Those forty days in the desert only served to sharpen the blade of suffering which now pierced his heart. Aisha..--
He'd never seen the young girl again. That last glimpse of her half-naked body, crying and struggling as her father dragged her away from him, was an image which burned itself into Djarins' mind. Some nights, it'd waken him, and he'd find tears streaming down his face in profusion. He'd wipe them off and try to push those bittersweet memories away.
--
Back in the present, this spirit spoke her name. It couldn't be Aisha, could it? Surely the name was common, especially for those in Heruin. Only this wasn't Heruin. Regardless, Djarin refused to accept the possibility.
"You okay?" The spirit asked. "You look like you've just seen a ghost." It chuckled at the irony. "Well, I guess you have.."
Djarin shook his head. "It's nothing. I.. just.. Well, I knew someone with that name."
"Well, now you're about to know
two someones with that name. Come, follow me. I'll show you where she's at."
The ghost confidently strode off into the castle, leaving Djarin and Blend to follow. The winding paths of the castle were incredibly complex, and Djarin found himself disoriented within only moments of beginning the journey. Apparently, they had left the region of the castle now crammed with guests, and the more remote quarters of the garrison now laced the halls on either side of him. Great wooden doors covered each portal, nearly as thick as the walls which housed them.
They turned a hall and the ghost finally stopped. It motioned eagerly to a door. "Here, here." Then the ghost walked through the door. Djarin heard the subtle click of a latch and the door pushed open. The spirit was on the other side, beckoning him in impatiently.
The room was a wreck. A beam from the ceiling had been torn loose during the earthquake, and this massive wooden support had decimated the entire room. The fragments of a bookshelf littered the floor. Dislodged bricks and stones covered everything, and a fine powder made of shattered mortar left the room looking ghostly grey.
Beneath the beam, lying on what remained of a bed, was the emaciated figure of a woman. Thin, bonelike hands rested against wisps of black hair. Some contraption had been made out of shards of the bookshelf lashed together with strips of cloth, a sort of grabbing device, which apparently the pinned woman had been using to try and get water. An overturned bowl of water rested halfway across the room, evidence of her failure. Surely, she was dead by now.
"No, not dead," the spirit cried happily. "She's just unconscious! Help me with this."
The spirit was pushing against the wooden beam in vain. Djarin motioned Blend over and the pair strained against the wood. Groaning, the beam rolled over, freeing the pinned woman.
Her legs seemed broken, twisted at odd angles. Her body was skeletal beneath her nightgown, suffering from extreme dehydration. Her skin was leathery and wrinkled, too much skin for the meager body beneath it.
Djarin reached a hand out and rolled her slowly onto her back.
The wrinkled face of his lost lover stared back at him, her green eyes dull and unseeing.
Aisha.
--
Chaos had taken so much from him. So many sacrifices. Djarin had given his very life to Chaos, and it had given his life back. That, and so much more. His love.
Aisha. He'd never dreamed of seeing her again. The Tral are very adamant about their traditions, and Djarin had heard that Aisha was married into another clan long before his own banishment in the desert was finished. He'd often imagine sneaking away and finding this distant clan, of stealing her away from her husband, but then the memories of their crude separation convinced him that she would be best off left alone. For the longest time, that had been that.
"Blend.." Djarin motioned the man over. "I.. I want you to take her out of here, take her to safety. I still must see the King. But when, if, I return.. I want to find her again. Can you do that for me?"
"Who is she?" Blend asked, his curiosity peaked.
"I.. I once loved her.. I suppose I always will." Djarin looked down at the figure longingly. "Chaos has given me a gift, Blend. When all this is done, I can be with her again." His lips curled into a smile, emotions pouring through him. "Tempesturo is good."
Blend nodded. "Yeah, I can take care of her. But don't you think you'll get rid of me this easily. We've still got a king to talk to, don't we? You think I'd miss out on that?"
The spirit, Aishas' brother, spoke up. "Seems you've done me a favor, Seer, by saving my sister. It's my turn to return it. I used to work here in the garrison, before I died. I know this castle like the back of my dead hand. There's an old passageway which leads up to the Kings' chambers. They made it as an emergency escape, should the King find himself locked in his room for whatever nefarious reason. If you're trying to get close to the King, I can take you there. What happens next is between you and your God."
Djarin nodded his assent. "Very well."
"Come with me. We have to go to the reception room."
Blend crouched down and picked up the frail figure of Aisha. She seemed to weigh less than a hundred pounds, for Blend carried her effortlessly as they turned to follow after the ghost.
--
In the reception room, men and women of prominence mingled with eachother. These people served the Kings' Court, land owners, princes and barons, the noble and established. Many of them appeared to be survivors of the tidal wave, and were being directed by guards to their own personal quarters. Of course, Djarin hadn't expected the commoners to mingle with these well-to-do lords of the realm, but the sense of civility and normality that pervaded the air seemed forced and it made Djarin sick. These people were sheltering themselves from the atrocities of the outside world by surrounding themselves in fine clothes and foods.
To Djarins' surprise, he noticed Deanna. The woman seemed freshly bathed, her skin flawless, her hair silken smooth. Her companion, Quinn, was at her side. The pair seemed involved in a conversation, and Djarin could tell by their sensual motions that they'd just finished that sacred ritual reserved for men and women in love.
Djarin approached the couple and bowed his head.
"A pleasure to see you both," he offered. Blend promptly translated for him. "It seems that we've been destined to cross paths again." His eyes were filled with warmth and friendliness as he studied the pair. The warm affection they mutually shared reminded him of his long-lost Aisha, the emaciated woman in Blends' arms. Soon, Djarin would know love like this again.
"I am going to speak with the King. To show him my revelation. You're welcome to come. I have a suspicion it will be quite the event."
Posted: Fri Apr 27, 2012 3:55 pm