This Unequal War of Men and Devils
The wise men know what wicked thingsAre written on the sky,They trim sad lamps, they touch sad strings,Hearing the heavy purple wings,Where the forgotten seraph kingsStill plot how God may die.from The Ballad of the White Horse, G.K. ChestertonI took an afternoon's break from Plenilune to scribble a brief bit of Gingerune that happened to come to me. You know how that goes.
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“So it is you who has it. I did wonder, when I misplaced it, how I could do it so thoroughly.”The blood shocked back to my heart and seemed to spin in it, fire-tinged; my splayed hands froze on the pages. Somehow, as though some familiar note called out from him to me, as though some familiar touch reached across the distance from him to my mind, I knew him. I had not imagined meeting him like this. I flung out my thoughts through the house but I knew I was alone. Maslin and Rowena would have no notion that the thing we had been looking for stood on our threshold, pinning me down with his awful eyes. It was a moment before I could turn and meet them.He looked younger and was far more handsome than I had imagined. Taller, too: the crest of his sheeny golden hair brushed the lintel of the door and his chin was bent a little downward as if, should he straighten, he would knock his skull against the beam. The blue of his eyes was like heaven—the irony burned in my mouth. They looked into me and knew me and called me by name, the name Maslin used; and for the first time in a long, long time, I tasted desperation. The dark blue of his robe fell back; he put out his hand, beckoning to me. I felt the force of it rattle my bones. “Come here, Gingerune.”“I will not come,” I said through my teeth. “I have two feet. I do not need two more.”The cool, playful anger jinked from eye to blue eye. “ ‘Twas it from her you got your churlish tongue? Mayhap I should teach it some manners.”The very sight of him was conjuring up in me all I wished to quench, but I said recklessly, “You will stand there, now that you have come, and give me some answers. After all these years, I think I deserve that.”He folded back his hand into his robe. “I think the human—where is he, and what does he do now with your quarter-whelp?—has given you sufficient answers. He did not lie.”“You did,” I snapped.He smiled, and his smile was full of fangs. I do not know what made me do it, save that I hated that beautiful face and I hated those fangs and I hated the fire coursing through my own veins. I hated myself, and with an agonized cry I sprang forward, ducking and sweeping upward to take him under the ribs.But he was too fast. He gripped my fist in his hand and jerked me forward, out of balance, snatching my other hand so that we stood, fingers locked, feet planted in the worn floorboards, eye to eye. I found that I was terrified, trembling with terror—and he knew it: I saw in those beautiful eyes that seemed to pull me into their rich, icy depths, I saw that he knew how afraid I was. “Why did you do it?” I rasped. The balls of my feet gripped the floor and I pushed, but it was like pushing against a rock wall. He did not budge.A little spark flickered between his teeth. “She did not resist me.”“Who could resist you!” I spat back in his face. “Tell me why you did it! Tell me what you are doing!”I did not think he would really tell me. He could crush me under one clawed foot and crack my bones with fire and swallow me down into hell with one gulp. Who was I to face the Grimouder prince and demand an explanation from him? But the very cheek of it seemed to catch him off-guard and to almost amuse him. His fingers tightened on mine: the pain began to lance up my arms and send little lightning-flickers across my vision. He lowered his head, his forehead nearly touching mine. His voice was a whisper and smelled sweet in the air.“I did it to ruin you. Now you will always come back to us, you and your little girl; they will prick your human veins and see your human blood, but in your heart of hearts you will always be one of us, and we will set our feet upon their necks and crush them. Almost I am sorry they have forgot the Mark. It would make the victory that much sweeter in our mouths.”“I will rule no one,” I told him quietly—quietly, because I meant it with every scrap of my tattered soul. “And I will rule no one in your name. And whatever you think of doing, you will not, by all that is holy, lay a hand on my daughter.” I looked into those possessive blue eyes and spoke through my teeth. “If you do, I swear I will hunt you down as no one has ever hunted you down and I will make the heavens rain fire and the earth gape and the seas burn and I will bury you—” I shook his fists, interlocked with mine. “I will bury you. And you will rue the day you dreamt of Anehawk and Gingerune and Rowena and turning the blood of the sons of men to fire.”He let go one hand and took hold of the fire of my hair in two fingers. It burned with the light that came in past him through the door, the red of it like defiance, the glow of it like hope. He smiled, but in his eyes as he watched his fingers work the heavy ginger strands there was something like caution. I had not expected him to answer me: it struck me that he had not expected me to defy him, he who was so beautiful, whom many who remembered thought of as a god, and he was testing the playing field.“I see I have woke the dragon.”
Published on August 20, 2012 13:43
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