thoros of myr
â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â âGRATEFUL?â The word lulled on his tongue, and he tasted it for a moment, slushed like wine through sharp teeth. The priest axed his body in Satinâs direction. Their field of vision, spared leeway by the sun, met level and unobstructed across the earth. Its grainy pebbles scratched against the palm of his hand, sending sharp tremors through muscles already wearied by exercise.
                âHow can one hope to gauge any Godâs gratefulness? Iâm alive, arenât I?â An inquisitive brow hitched towards the other. He thirsted for information, yes; his service was errected on this little morsels of truth, on the daily experience of folk everywhere, all struggling in the Light. Perhaps not equal in their struggle, but toiling nonetheless, sometimes feebly and often the wrong way, but never in vain. The God drank all in. Only the absence of life, heâd felt, the numbing of the soul, could resemble any offense. It was abandon, and not pain, that most resembled things from the Long Night â things his God despised and fought against.
                Beyond information, however, there was always genuine curiosity. It had always been. Thoros could recognize its reflection in the way he mingled with his brothers in arms, with the devoted self-forgetfulness he adopted the culture and manners of others. Even, blood be damned, in how easily heâd taken on the stag kingâs manners. He saw it cast back at him now, in the way he gazed at a nameless servant from the far-off North. His eyes pooled with warm and flowing shadows. Their color, brown rather than black, dappled with silver flashes. âIs it gratefulness you seek, Satin the Steward?â
        SATINS NERVOUS HANDS TOYED with a stray pebble that his fingers located as a way of staving off all the thoughts of guilt he had for entertaining this man. But he had heard the stories, listened to the bards with his petal-lips slightly open in awe, of the red priest and his lightning lord, brought back from the dead by human hands and a godâs power.Â
        He leaned forward so that there was less room between them, and looked nervously about as if there would be a septon standing sternly in some shadow waiting to admonish him for his interest. âIs it true...â Satin said in a hushed tone. âWhat they say about you and Lord Beric, and... and him coming back from the dead?âÂ
        As he leaned forward, the seven pointed star that hung around his neck swung free of the confines of the loose, low-necked black shirt he had taken to wearing in the heat of the capital. Embarrassed, with his cheeks burning red and his fingers working at double speed to stuff it back in his shirt with all the fumbling of a child caught in an act of perceived naughtiness. âI... um... I donât know what I seek.â Perhaps gratitude was at the root of it, he wondered.Â
        âGods do not want my worship. They are not grateful for me kneeling at their altars.â He said, uncharacteristic bitterness on his tongue. Thatâs what a holy brother at the Sept in Oldtown had told him. He recited the words from memory, burned into his brain as they were from the humiliation of having to hear them. âBut the Seven accept mine out of a wish that I might one day stumble off the path of sin and fully into their light.â He shrugged. âI am the one who should be grateful for that, I suppose.âÂ











