Late upload for the "Prayer for Gulls" card
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Late upload for the "Prayer for Gulls" card
Card for "The Slough"
A Prayer for Gulls
Estle held the bloody head of her halberd away from her face; none of the watchers cleaned their weapons on pyre nights. She eyed the dark beyond the ruins, at the edge of the firelight great oaks reached toward moonless stars. Somewhere on the other side of the pyre she heard another watcher put down one of the restless dead, with the telltale squelching crack and a thud.
They found the ruins yesterday and guided the rest of the clan there just before twilight. The mossy bones of the moldering cathedral stretched into indigo skies when the aldor read the dirt, a tired smile graced her milky eyes, and she declared it a fine place to camp and lay their dead to rest. Estle spent more time admiring the surviving columns and arches than she did looking out as the clan pitched their tents. Even now she traced their black shadows across the starry void.
The gossamer knell of the singing bowl sounded from the fire. The clan fell silent. Estle dared not look back from the woods, sheâd face a dozen of the restless before a scolding from the aldor for shirking her watch.
The aldor cleared her throat and from memory Estle saw it all unfold behind her eyes. Sparks cascaded into the night, fire danced on leathery skin, ragged hands reached toward the heavens, chapped lips spoke,
âO fallen, culver of the divide no longer. Our yoke broken gulls on the blackest sea, BlodsĂŹdhe guide thy starry wings to the glittering shores of birth anew.â
The bouquet, made of lilies, Blodwyrt, offal and keepsakes of the deceased, was thrown to the flames.
âSvwy seren.â The aldor called, the clan responded as one.
The smell crept into Estleâs nose, fetid and sacred. The bereaved tenderly unbound the intricate shrouds around their loved ones and waited.
They came slowly, silently the Bael Moths descended on the dead. Within minutes an ecliptic murmuration danced around the fire. The fluttering throngs gently embraced the bodies. A moth as big as Estleâs hand landed on her gored halberd. An older female, from her size and adornments. Across her wings was a sanguine tapestry, like veins that blossomed into a dozen lolling eyes. A smaller male joined her, also painted sanguine but missing the eyes and with wings ringed in the hue of pallid flesh. Estle thought they looked like a heart splayed in two, until she imagined ventricles gazing listlessly back at her.
Their snouts worked away at the bloodied steel, soon her blade was eclipsed in a velvet swarm. A few landed on Estleâs shoulder and cleaned the blood from the iron pauldron that protected it. She fought down a giggle as they fluttered on her neck. Soon her halberd was polished to a shine and the swarm departed back to the fire.
She looked toward the woods again, once she was sure nothing lurked in the trees she stole a glance at the pyre. The bodies were seas of wings with rolling waves of shadow and maroon. The Mourners wept, grieving and relieved in equal measure as they choked out final goodbyes. Estleâs gaze fell on a sea smaller than the rest; she ripped her eyes back to the wooded abyss.
The clan slowly retreated to their tents to let the moths complete their solemn rite, and to drink to the lost. Hours crept, the fire faded, a few of the wakened limped out of the trees but Estleâs deft hand and the reach of her halberd made quick work of them. Some of the moths that hadnât found room around the fire fed on them. Estle lifted her gaze from their rocking wings at the sound of armored footfalls. She turned. Arth shot her a polite smile through his beard that didnât quite reach his sleepy eyes. They wordlessly exchanged the post and Estle retired to the watchersâ tent.
Dawn broke like a fire. Shattered clouds rained gold on the misty Oaks and Sycamores of Erst Weald. Estle stretched stiffly against one of the stone pillars, she was certain her bedroll had been laid on a root. The bonfire was now a smolder that some of the unsupervised children poked with sticks, only to be shooed away by the hissing aldor.
She approached the ashes. The five fallen laid in ossified repose on their shrouds, arms stretched above their heads, skulls faced heavenward. Near her feet a small alabaster face smiled up at her, haloed by a mandala of blues and golds embroidered in her white shroud. Bryn hadnât seen her thirteenth winter. Her father knelt beside her, just as he had for the week before she lost her fight to The Weeping.
âEss.â Rees greeted her without looking up. She allowed the familiar name. This was the first time since Brynâs infection that Rees had called her by anything but her full name or a whip of curses and epithets.
âRees, I am so sor â â
âI'm sorry.â He stood, eyes stuck to the dirt, âYou neednât be, Ess.â He looked up at her, fidgeting with his hands, âBryn always wanted to be just like you. There was no stopping her, she wanted to protect us. You gave her that. And if you hadn't gotten her back I might not have told her goodbye.â Estle only now noticed what he was fidgeting with, and the missing fifth rib from Brynâs left side. Rees finished tying the leather strip adorned in copper and blue beads. He handed it to Estle tenderly and she met his misty eyes.
âLet her watch over you now.â In his rough palm was the rib, the blackened engraving in it was still warm to the touch. Estle gently took the amulet and placed it over her head.
âSvwy seren.â Estle said with a nod. Rees returned to Bryn. She knew those words were carved in the bone, in glyphs of the eldest tongue. The binding words of all living Ebonbairn: Until the stars.
The Slough
âHow much farther?â Ard squinted at the sun through the dead pines above, dappled light played across green eyes.
âFar.â
The crimson murk of Red Slough gurgled, mocking Ardwinâs question like a squelching laugh. The rhythmic clack of hooves on ragged road and the echoes of the swamp did not deafen his frustration. A stray beard of lichen caressed Ardâs face and set a petulant edge to his voice.
âYou said that three days ago too.â
âTrue then, true now.â Follmerâs white beard smirked beneath his ragged cloth mask, the scent of dried Dogwood blooms cracked with his grin, masking fetid rot of the slough. Follmer always thought Dogwood literally smelled like wet dog.
 Better wet dog than dead dog
âYou chose this life Ardyâ Follmer chuckled, patting the cracklock rifle on the side of his mare. Ard grimaced through his own mask, both looked across the briny ripples of crimson âwaterâ, fleshy chunks of bone bobbed under the sickly rose sky. Gadflies the size of grapes danced above the soup of carrion, scattering when the amorphous denizens of the marsh surfaced to eat. Ard suspected they had a hard time staying above the water due to their random configurations of limbs, mouths and eyes.
âI imagined more drinking and shooting and less⊠flesh... pits.â Ard caressed his own cracklock pistol strapped to his chest, mostly out of apprehension. Follmer chuckled.
âThat's cause the kids inside the walls that imagine flesh pits stay inside the walls." Ard had felt dumber every day since he'd left Arlastin.
"Why'd you leave?"
"Didn't. I was born out here, the road's my only home."
"You were a vagrer?" Follmer drew a long sigh
"I am a ranger, and I was Ebonbairn. Don't worry, I'm not gonna feed you to moths or make your spine into a necklace."
"I'm sorry I've just never met - "
"It's fine."
The two cantered on in silence, black coats gently flapping in the breeze. Quiet minutes grew into quiet hours on the winding road of bridges and bricks in varying states of decay and disrepair. Ard constantly found himself scratching at the burning brand on his neck. The thrumming pain hadnât stopped since they descended the mountains into The Cyst, the air was thick with the plagueâs red miasma, like ashen flakes of blood.
The Slough had a strange beauty to it. A few species of willows and flowering trees had adapted to the rot, the blood gave their bark a rusty hue and set red edges on their pale blooms. The droning hum of cicadas and calls of carrion birds filled the air. Ard kept seeing little rods of dark red flowers that Follmer called Blodwyrt. He'd also advised Ard to crush some up and smear it on any exposed skin to keep the Gadflies away, unless he wanted to be "The proud mother of thumb sized, skin-eating maggots." Ard was quick to take the advice.
âHow many times have you done this?â
âEnough,â Follmer took a quick glance at the waters and snapped his head back straight, âMy clan took this route a few times."
"Why not just go around?"
"Because we came in here to bathe in rotblood." Follmer knew he had to let Ard's comment go, he could feel the poor kid behind him looking down in shame. "It was a pilgrimage, thereâs a big old church out here full of those moths you love so much."
Two nights ago, on the edge of The Cyst, Follmer tossed a rotted forearm into their fire just before sundown. He said the smell would discourage the dead from coming their way. He was correct, but what he did not tell Ard was the smell would also attract a swarm of Bael Moths that he awoke completely covered in.
"Why haven't we seen any?"
"Well they're nocturnal kid, we don't travel at night, and they're too busy eating the rotblood to pay you any mind."
"They were trying to eat us?"
"No, but they were checking to see if we were cold and rotted enough for them to start eating us."
Ard shuddered, but then figured selective moths weren't the worst thing he'd had try eating him.
They pressed on. Ard started seeing more dilapidated structures. Derelict homes rotted down to their cobblestone foundations, sunken shrines rusted with crimson brine. Tallow candles and old bone chimes adorned some of the sites. Hesitantly, Ard decided to prod.
"Why did you leave your clan?" Follmer didn't respond with his usual joke or snap, Ard wondered if he might ignore the question entirely.
"I didn't. I lost them." Ard was content to not press further, but Follmer was ready to do something far worse than snap. He was ready to give Ard a lesson, and Ard took it quietly.
"We came through on a summer day near the solstice like today, we had just enough light to make the trip. Just enough, and we couldn't afford accidents, you know what that's like." He did, Ard knew already the most dangerous thing one could do was lose their balance, or miss the tiniest sign something was watching them. Follmer did not wait for him to ask what happened, "
           âOne of the childer, barely fourteen, Fythe. He fell ass over tit into the deep, pulled him down, hollering something awful. One of our watchers, Bran, big fellow, starts pullinâ at him. He's afraid to pull as hard as he can for fear of ripping the poor Fythe in half, but the kid comes up a bit,â Follmer choked, he looked far away past the pines, right back to that awful moment, âNo legs, not even bone, just the tail of his spine, couldnât turn him so it just, ate him. Down to the bone, something like roots or veins wormed up into his torso, he started rippinâ off his brand.â Follmerâs gut knotted like a noose.
âHe spoke, talked like heâd grown extra voices in the back of his throat, âI want to be awake, I want to be awake.ââ Follmer trailed off, spiraling down with his stomach until the grief reached a fever pitch. He awoke to the present again, to the squelching and buzzing, and to an Ard a little greener around the gills than heâd left him, he looked back, âJust another part of the ramble kid, even Rangers go mad on the path, fact of life. Weâre only men, we werenât made for this world. Youâll live to see worse, hopefully.â Follmer looked toward the Slough one last time, âCome on, weâre burning daylight.â
The sun crossed noon, tinted shades of copper as it lumbered across the sickly heavens to the west horizon.
âWeâll need shelter soonâ Ard prodded
âNo, we go straight through, by the short and curlies weâll make it,â Follmer could feel another protest in Ardâs throat, âSloughâs a hungry place at night, ainât no shelter here.â
 A wretched mewling echoed across the murk, Ard jumped and snapped his head to the mire, Follmerâs hand gripped his rifle. About fifty paces out in the red water, thrashing and crying, a chunk of flesh that looked vaguely like a toddlerâs head bobbed to the surface. It was split down the middle, threads of sinew and skin wrenched the two haves together with the grace of hungry jaws. White eyes rolled into place.
âDonât look at it Ard.â Sclera sprouted veins like roots, scared pupils peered back at Ard. âLook away!â Follmer turned toward Ard. Flesh took shape like clay, the eyes formed fully into a verdant green. His own brown hair draped across them, but where a boyish jaw shouldâve been a veil of flesh grew into place, wrinkled and bunched like his mask. It let out a muffled scream, it was awake.
Follmer ripped Ard away, he cupped the poor boyâs head in his hands.
âIt ainât real kid.â Ard looked back, the flesh had collapsed, unable to withstand the weight of existence without its muse. It faded back as it was swallowed up by something scaly with distinctly human teeth. "Just reflections."
Vomit raced up Ardâs throat, he barely choked it back down to save his mask. He looked back to Follmer, who with an affirming nod remounted his horse.
The shadow of the pines stretched longer across the red, the copper sun sank low on the sawtooth tree line. Ard had now decided opening his mouth was not in his best interest, because the Slough seemed to listen better than Follmer did, but the growing shadows got the better of his gut.
âFollmer.â He trudged on, not a glance back.
âFollmer!â louder
âDonât yell!â Follmer hissed.
âWe gotta hole up till dawn, we wonât make it out by nightfa- â
âFOOOOLLmMmEEEEeerRRRrrrrrrrâŠâ The slough mocked, both stopped dead and searched for the voice. By the bank Ard saw Cattails, their tips replaced with two bloody strings of soft tissue, resonating with the whispering wind before mocking again, âDOooonât YeeeEEllLLLlâŠâ Another patch of reeds screeched, now another, each parrot distorting and descending until it collapsed into a long screech.
âRide, NOW!â         Â
Both mares raced against the dying light, the murk opened along the shore as its dregs and wretches clambered out. Legs, arms, fingers grew like oak branches in a wild gnarl that raced ever closer to the thundering hooves. Nine cold fingers cracked around Ardâs ankle, his skull rung as it crashed to the road. He felt thorns gnash into his skin.
Follmer leapt off his horse, Ardâs head felt hot, he felt thorns snaking up his leg, he looked down and wailed as a barbed tendril of muscle pulsed and squelched ever closer.
Tugged one way by the Slough, another by Follmer, he gave out.
Ard awoke to the drip of water on stone, a meager fire smoldered in front of him. The fireâs dancing warmth enthralled his tired eyes so much he barely saw Follmer tending to it. Their eyes met, Follmer glided toward him.
âGo back to sleep Ardy.â
âWhereâŠ?â
 "Go back to sleep.â
âWhat happened?â
âGo back to sleep.â
âStop fucking saying that!â
Follmer stared
âThey can see you if youâre awake.â
âWhat?â
âDonât wake up.â The cave walls flitted red and faded from view, yawning into an abyss of crimson. The fire light twitched with the shadow it was attached to as it swam by.
They can see me
Ard felt himself chained by flesh to the silt and rot. A thousand pricks rippled across his skin as it struggled against the floor of the marsh. The burning in his arm stopped, ghostly numbness replaced it. Then his other arm, leg, breaking apart, shedding an unbearable weight until he could float away.
No no no no no no no no no no no no no no no
Veins and roots popped as he pulled himself free, swimming from the womb toward the shimmering sky of sun and blood.
He broke the surface, gasping, crying, looking frantically over the Slough. He saw the road, two men on horseback in the approaching dusk, one with no mouth and green eyes that met his own.
He screamed.
Finally forcing myself to write down the cosmic horror/fantasy world thatâs been putting wasps in my skull and red in my eyes for years. Short stories, snippets and drawings, enjoy!