With regards to all that post about possible kcd3 plot, Henry probably joining Zizka for Hussite wars and Hans being on opposite side for battle of Zivohost
I have vision
Hans seeing Henry dying by Eric's hand, killing Eric, holding Henry's body in the battle aftermath
and after all that leaving Petr Konopistsky side, effectively never fighting in Hussite wars afterwards
I headcanon Finarfin to have some small dose of foresight from his mom. It mainly missed him, going to Galadriel instead, but still he has some small visions from times to times, silly things or ones he doesn't understand.
Sometimes he'll look like he is daydreaming but he just saw you tripping in a very, very near future.
Sometimes, after the Darkening, he'll glimpse one of his children in a dark corridor and will delude himself just a second that they're here, they're back, but it never lasts. They look strange anyway. With a harshness in their gaze he never saw before.
The Dagor Bragollach ends any comfort he might have find from his dreams.
By the War of Wrath, it is hundred of years since last he saw something that just made him laugh (when was the last time he really laughed ?)
The first time the dragons arrive, he is just too slow to dodge a time, and ends up in the healing tent, feverish and voice wrecked because of the fumes.
When Galadriel arrives to the camp of the Western Host, she hears of her father, and fears she is too late for this, too.
She isn't. He lives. He has not opened his eyes for days, but he lives.
When he wakes up, duty has already called her away from his bedside, but he remembers, he's sure he remembers she was here, more real than any vision his fever-addled mind could have conjured. He stumbles out of bed, barely able to stand, and looks for her, desperate, because he must make sure that it wasn't a dream, please, let it be not a dream this time...
Then he sees the golden glint of Arien upon a braided crown, and cannot move. The figure turn, and she is taller than him now, when did she grow up so much ?
His legs give up when a pair of strong arms engulf him in a teary embrace, and he whispers as he falls to the ground.
Hey guys, uh... wasn't there a plotline in the comics about the Winter Soldier going AWOL from HYDRA while deployed on a mission in the 1980s? And spending a few weeks wandering around Brooklyn, both lost and found, drawn back to this place by haunting memories and a longing for home that he could not explain? And then being discovered and brutally recaptured by HYDRA, dragged back into the darkness and beaten and drugged and mindwiped into submission until he was their obedient Winter Soldier again, and never daring to think again about escaping? And remaining enslaved until eventually being reawoken and rescued by Steve Rogers, decades later?
This has nothing to do with the way What If episode 2.2 ended :) :) :) Absolutely nothing :) :) :)
@smilingcrittersthingig 's Reborn AU has completely mentally beat my ass for the past 5 hours (compliment) so I'm just gonna. Rant.
THIS DESTROYED ME.
if I was an easy crier I actually wouldn't be typing this cause I'd be inconsolably bawling in my room
I can't even say that they're wrong for hating him, I mean he killed them and I'm not excusing him but GODDAMN I FEEL SO BAD FOR HIM AS WELL.
Like ppl joke abt how catnap is so devoted to the prototype but compared to simple "belief" He was PHYSICAL and actually tried to help him escape the hellhole that was playtime co.
(If you're not aware it's either theory or fact (i can't remember) that Theodore [Catnaps soul] had attempted an escape attempt via the help of the prototype and they got DAMN close but Theodore was fatally injured and instead of leaving him there to die the prototype had to go back and let them turn him into catnap.)
The prototype was so adamant on keeping him alive that they went back to their CAPTORS just so he wouldn't die. SHIT, I WOULDVE STARTED WORSHIPPING TOO!!! Even if he didn't make it out they didn't abandon him, so he had full belief that one day, under THEIR order, him and the rest of the critters would leave that place.
So imagine the heartbreaking moment when he realized that his fellow captors, his friends, both in form and mind, don't share the same sentiment, maybe even calling him crazy and violent.
And he just? doesn't know why??? Maybe he can admit the prototypes methods were a bit too confronting but it's not like they didn't TRY the non confrontal method. He thought they'd agree, they'd follow him but it wasn't the case.
So, well, he listened to the prototype. And that included killing his friends, yes, and it's stated (in the au) that he does regret it and I'm crying again great (positive)
And now they're all there, everyone that has either indirectly or directly been killed by him are there and they want him dead now too. AND HES PROBABLY STILL CONFUSED ON WHY THEY EVEN WENT AGAINST HIM AND WANTS TO KNOW. BUT ITS NOT LIKE HE CAN JUST GO ASK THEN THEYD ATTACK HIM PHYSICALLY OR VERBALLY ON SIGHT SO NOW HES S C A R E D OF THEM.
AND YOU CANT BLAME ANYONE BUT PLAYTIME.CO BECAUSE THEYRE ALL VICTIMS HERE. I CANT.
Oh and this.
I THOUGHT IT COULDNT GET ANY SADDER THEN YOU SHOT ME WITH THE DOOMED YAOI. HELL ITS NOT EVEN DOOMED ITS POST-DOOM. E V I L . THE FACT THAT DOGDAY PURELY HATES HIS GUTS AND WANTS HIM GONE AND DEAD THE MOST OUT OF ALL OF THEM IS GONNA KILL ME.
And then to add the final stab through my heart (compliment) I went to scourge for the enemies chart and-
HE HATES HIM SO MUCH! AND CATNAPS THE ONLY ONE OUT OF THE TWO WHO WANTS TO RECONCILE EVEN IF ITS JUST A LITTLE BIT AND WOULD MISS HIM QUITE A BIT WHILE DOGDAY JUST WANTS HIM G O N E . I CANT ANYMORE (I so can I love this)
You so did this to make people depressed for a week, it's working. And I love you for it.
Anyways we love angst in this household please keep it up I'm eating this au up for another 2 weeks buh bye
Edit: I'm so sorry for editing this so much the thoughts won't go away
crowley whoâs always had to be the one to dare - to ask questions, to tempt the angel, to come back after a long stay in hell, to show increasingly more evident signs of love, to finally kiss aziraphale
and aziraphale, whoâs still never learned how. aziraphale, whoâs making his own plans now (with crowley rescuing him not being part of the picture for once, but rather, what he thinks is him rescuing crowley) and being the one to dare Firstâ˘ď¸ and whoâs getting everything and yet nothing
and in that moment, when aziraphale is going up the elevator to heaven, he wonders if this is similar to how it felt when crowley fell
Based off this prompt from @writtenonreceipts prompt list that was also sent to @rowaelinprompts
Word count: ~4k
Warnings: Ummmm......this was written by Frederick, the resident angst monster, sooooo....yeah.
I'm going to run away and hide now
enjoy (?)
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The picture hung in a frame the exact shade of the dog tags hanging on a nail just to the left--dull gleaming iron gray with a faint attempt at a sheen when the light was just so, smoothly polished from loving care and the years of little and larger fingers that passed over it every time someone walked through the hallway. The glass, smooth as water and clearer than crystal, not a single fingerprint or hint of contact blurring its pristine surface, laid gently over the sepia-toned photograph in the frame, lovingly preserving the two brilliant smiles captured in time.Â
An old war photograph, a young soldier headed across the wide ocean without knowing whether he would come back, a young woman who loved him fiercely clinging as tightly as she could in the few moments they had left together, a cameraâs brilliant flash catching the last desperate bright burning smile the couple ever shared. The decades since had not so much as touched the measure of impossible joy trapped in that photograph, despite the ocean of emptiness that the sight of that photograph brought.Â
Twenty-seven years now since Rhoe Galathynius kissed Evalin Ashryver goodbye and boarded the silver and brown bus that whisked him away, first to an army camp and then across an ocean, his only bridge of connection to the woman he loved the few letters he had time to dash off and slip into the post before the mail carrier left.Â
Twenty-seven years now since the attack that abruptly ended his final letter.Â
Rhoe Galathynius died without ever knowing that Evalin had been pregnant when he left. She found out days before the attack, guarded the secret closely in her heart and wrote it down in her journal and in her letter, black ink licking across ivory pages, so much life and love and laughter contained in a few simple words.Â
To the right of the photograph--that letter, encased in its own frame, the clear glass revealing all of Evalinâs hopes and fears, all the emotions of a war wife. Sheâd barely been married three months before Rhoe got the draft notice, barely three months overflowing with joy and passion to hide that ever- lurking knowledge that he could be called away at any moment. Three months of proudly displaying the matching gold bands on their left hands before Rhoe slipped the band from his finger, knelt down before her, and pressed the ring into her hand.Â
âKeep it safe for me, my Fireheart.âÂ
~
Evalin still wore that ring on a simple chain around her neck. Growing up, Aelin remembered asking why Mama had a ring on her necklace, and she remembered the way her motherâs voice caught when she whispered that it was Dadâs ring.Â
That soft hitch in Evalinâs voice was the only outward sign of grief sheâd ever shown her daughter, even as Aelin grew into a woman and fully understood her fatherâs death. Even still, Evalin never cried in front of her daughter, not even when Aelin turned eighteen and looked into the box of carefully preserved letters and mementos, almost able to hear her fatherâs voice for the first time.Â
ââKeep it safe for me, my Fireheart,ââ Evalin whispered that night as she held Aelin close to her, closing her eyes against the sudden swell of memories. âKeep it safe for me.âÂ
Though her eyes had shone with unshed tears, Evalin still hadnât cried on the day of Aelinâs wedding when she slipped into her daughterâs changing room and removed the chain from around her neck, settling herself into a chair at Aelinâs side. Aelin grasped her motherâs hand, willing herself to keep from crying and ruining her makeup as Evalin pressed the golden band into her daughterâs free hand.Â
âYour father told me to keep it safe, Fireheart, and now Iâm telling you the same.â Evalin unclasped the chain, sliding the ring free. âHe would want you to have it.âÂ
âMama,â Aelin whispered, the word something she hadnât called her mother for years, turning Rhoeâs wedding band over in her hands.Â
âWeâre so proud of you, Fireheart.â Evalin kissed her daughterâs forehead. âSo proud.âÂ
And when Aelin placed her fatherâs ring onto Rowanâs finger, claiming him as her husband, the bright burning joy of that moment could almost drown out the pins and insignias and medals and marks of honor adorning the fine navy fabric of his jacket. The sheer overwhelming happiness filling her heart and mind and soul and body could almost blot out the rigid stance of her new husbandâs posture, years of military training having drilled that posture into his bones.Â
Just like her mother, she fell in love with a military man knowing he could at any time be called away to duty.Â
And he had been.Â
When they were dating, Rowan had knocked on Aelinâs door at the crack of dawn one foggy November morning, his standard-issue duffel bag at his feet and a storm of emotions seething in his face.Â
âIâve been called up, Fireheart.âÂ
She hadnât said anything, just pulled him by the collar into her apartment and clung to him like her buoy in a writhing ocean, burying her face into his broad chest and inhaling the familiar, comforting scent of pine and mountain breezes that so calmed her heart. Heâd wrapped her into his arms, tucking his face against her hair, whispering promise after promise into the messy blonde strands.Â
âCome home to me,â she breathed, fisting her hands in his jacket. âCome home.âÂ
âAlways,â he swore.Â
That time, he had.Â
~
Aelin remembered the strangled cry of relief and love and worry sheâd released when Rowan texted her from New York, saying simply that he was back and when his flight would be landing at their local airport. She still remembered the way she gasped with all the emotions she couldnât yet let loose when he walked through the doors, his pine-green eyes immediately latching onto her, the way her legs took on a mind of their own and brought her sprinting to him, the way he dropped his duffel and caught her and held her as close as physically possible.Â
So many tears shed that day, and all of them were of pure joy.Â
Eight months after they were married, Aelin came home from work to find Rowan sitting on the sofa twisting the wedding band around and around his tattooed finger, an opened envelope on the coffee table next to him, the military insignia stamped onto the paper blaring out the damning message.Â
Duty.Â
âI donât want to leave you,â he whispered softly, voice broken into a thousand thousand shards as she held him, his head tucked into the crook of her neck, his broad, honed body draped over hers, her fingers carding through his short-cropped hair.Â
âI know,â she breathed. âI know.âÂ
Both of them were crying that evening, that night, curling into each otherâs bodies in a tangle of limbs and skin and unspoken promises, the faint tang of steel and sweat in the air seeming like every kind of foreboding omen. Aelinâs eyes glittered with an ocean of tears when she awoke with the dawn light, stealing one precious moment of looking at her husband relaxed in his sleep, one last moment to cherish in her heart until he came home to her.Â
For he would come home. She would hear nothing else.Â
She stood strong and tall by his side at the airbase, hand laced with his until the call for boarding came and he had to leave.Â
âI love you,â she whispered. âCome home to me.âÂ
âI promise.â Rowan kissed her wedding band. âI love you, Fireheart.â Softly, tenderly, he slipped the wedding band from his finger, cupping her hand with his and placing the ring into her hands.Â
Aelin swallowed her sob as she wrapped her fingers around the warm gold band, the warmth of her husbandâs hand lingering in the precious metal.Â
âKeep it safe for me, my Fireheart.âÂ
She broke at that, wrapping her arms around him and holding so tight his breath went short, her tears dripping into his jacket. Her kiss was desperate, longing, filled with a million things she couldnât find the words to say.Â
âYouâre coming back to me,â she gasped fiercely as she let him go, their linked hands the only point of contact. âYou are.âÂ
âI promise.âÂ
And then Rowanâs hand fell from hers as he walked away, keeping his eyes locked on hers until the distance became too great.Â
~
Nine weeks later, she fainted in her office.Â
Elide Lochan, her dear friend since childhood and her coworker at the publishing firm, heard her collapse and came running into her office, reviving her and whisking her off to urgent care, where the nurse hooked her up to an IV drip, took a few samples, and came back bearing the news that nearly made Aelin faint again.Â
She was pregnant.Â
She asked the doctor for an extra set of ultrasound photos at her first scan appointment, tucking the little black-and-white images of the fourteen-week baby inside of her into the next letter she sent to Rowan.Â
His voice in their next phone call was broken for a far different reason than it had been when he left for this deployment.Â
âAre you serious?âÂ
âYes.â She sniffled, wishing and wishing she could be sharing this news face to face. âIâm pregnant, Rowan.âÂ
âGods,â he breathed, a muffled sob echoing faintly from his end of the call. âGods, weâre having a baby.âÂ
âCome home to us,â Aelin whispered when the call ended.Â
His promise that time was even more fervent than ever.Â
~
Six months of sharing ultrasounds and photos of her growing bump and brief phone calls whenever he was allowed time to call home passed so quickly, and before either of them knew it, Rowan was once again on the phone, this time with very good news.Â
Heâd be home in ten days, his tour of duty over.Â
The baby kicked as Aelin gasped, tears springing to her eyes for a hundred different reasons. She rubbed her free hand atop her bump, soothing the baby. âThatâs right, my little love, Dadâs going to be here so soon. Youâd better wait until he gets here, I need to have his hand to shatter.âÂ
Rowanâs soft, raspy chuckle was a sound that Aelin wished she could bottle up and keep forever.Â
Because a week after that call, his CO was the one on the other end of the line.Â
She didnât remember collapsing on the kitchen floor after hanging up the phone, torrents of shock and grief and confusion and terror washing over her. She didnât remember reaching shakily for the phone again when a searing blaze of pain speared through her lower body, didnât remember calling her mother or the ambulance that arrived moments later or the tension and terror of that long blurry hazy night first in the ambulance and then in the hospital.Â
She remembered how Alanna wailed when she came into the world, the tiny baby girlâs lungs screaming out her arrival as if she, too, somehow knew what triggered her motherâs labor.Â
We must inform you that Captain Rowan Whitethorn is missing in action.Â
Aelin cradled her baby girl in a dazed state of shock, murmuring softly to her daughter and letting herself be grounded in the simple act of learning to nurse. Alanna calmed so quickly once she was fed, her little green eyes blinking sleepily up at her mother.Â
She looked so much like Rowan.Â
Lana grew so quickly, the tiny bundle of blankets sheâd been at the hospital soon giving way to soft baby clothes and blankets and a beautiful crocheted hawk that Evalin had made for the baby. Every night that Lanaâs cries drew Aelin out of slumber to feed and soothe her daughter made her wish for Rowan, made her wish that her beloved husband were there to see their daughterâs firsts.Â
But for all her efforts and searches and trips to the base to meet with the commander--nothing.Â
Silence.Â
~
Lana took her first bites of food, said her first words, grew her first teeth, took her first wobbling steps, had her first birthday without Rowan there to see any of it. Aelin took pictures of it all, writing down the things she couldnât capture on a camera, building a book of Lanaâs first months and years for Rowan. If and when he ever returned.Â
Every time the small girl woke herself up crying, Aelin wished Rowan were there.Â
Sometimes, she just held her daughter and cried with her, whispering that it was okay, that Mama was okay, that it was all okay, until Lana calmed down and slept in her motherâs arms, her breathing steady against Aelinâs skin.Â
Sometimes, she sat in the rocking chair and rocked and told her daughter stories of her father, building a picture of the strong, kind, loyal, steadfast man who loved her even when she was just a set of pictures of her growing self inside Aelinâs womb. Sometimes, she told Lana all about the way they met, that night in the crowded, dimly lit bar when Aelin in her âslight tipsinessâ stumbled into Rowan hunched atop his stool at the end of the bar, nursing a beer and wearing a frightening scowl. Gods, how she wished he was there to laugh his dry, deep laugh and whisper to their precious little daughter that Mama was totally lying, that she was more than a little tipsy, that heâd been captivated by her since the moment he met her in that dingy dive bar.Â
Sometimes, she danced slowly around Lanaâs sage-green and dove-grey room, holding her daughter against her shoulder and hiding her silent tears as her daughter grew from a little baby she could cradle in her arms to a toddler whose sleepy head slumped against her motherâs shoulder.Â
Always, she lingered for as long as possible, overcome by the yearning for Rowan that she thought sheâd been able to control.Â
Always, her hand went to the ring hanging from a cord around her neck, fingers tracing over the smooth golden band as if she could still feel his warmth emanating from it.Â
Keep it safe for me, my Fireheart.Â
Gods damn it all to hell, heâd promised to come back.Â
~
Another photo hung next to the print of Rhoe and Evalin in Evalinâs house, one of Rowan and Aelinâs wedding portraits. In the image, Rowan beamed down at Aelin and she up at him, her head canted up to meet his gaze, the early evening sun washing over the scene and gilding the young couple in a bath of soft, golden light. In the image, their hands were linked, the golden band gleaming on Rowanâs finger like it gleamed on Rhoeâs hand in his and Evalinâs photograph. Aelinâs throat tightened every time she ran her finger along the smooth silver frame of that portrait, tracing the edge of her and Rowanâs all-too-brief happiness before the choking reality that he was still MIA crashed back down over her.Â
Lana loved seeing the pictures, her big green eyes widening when Aelin held her up to see. Indeed, one of her first words had been âDada,â spoken not long after her first birthday when Aelin was over at her motherâs house.Â
Hearing those syllables in her daughterâs sweet little voice ripped the scab clean off the wound in Aelinâs fragile heart.Â
~
Only a handful of weeks away from her second birthday, Lana had taken to running all around the house and yard and nearly stopping Aelinâs heart when she turned around and her daughter had run off to another room. Mother and daughter were upstairs folding the laundry--well, Aelin was folding, Lana was playing with a couple of washcloths and talking away in toddler babble.Â
Four knocks thudded against the front door.Â
Lana dropped her washcloths. âDoor!â she exclaimed, running out of the bedroom and down the hallway.Â
Aelin caught her before she could try and scoot down the stairs. âUh-uh, lovey, Mama has to help you go downstairs, remember?âÂ
âI big!â Lana pouted, wriggling a little in Aelinâs hold as they descended the stairs. âDown Mama! Dowâ!âÂ
âAll right,â Aelin laughed, releasing her daughter.Â
Lana ran to the door and reached up for the lock, straining, her little arms still just unable to reach it. She pouted and clung to her motherâs leg. âWanna open.âÂ
âOf course,â Aelin smiled. âHere, help Mama open the door, lovey.âÂ
One small hand and one larger hand turned the doorknob, swinging the front door open to find--
âFireheart.âÂ
Aelinâs legs wavered and she grabbed the doorframe to keep herself upright, the whirling maelstrom of emotions sheâd shoved and locked away when she grew despairing of ever hearing news of Rowan bursting free from its prison and crashing over her.Â
For there was her husband standing in the doorway, his hair overgrown, his body haggard, his clothes not properly fitting, a fine pale scar slashing across his forehead and through his left eyebrow, his worn old duffel bag in his hand and all the oceansâ worth of tears spilling over in his eyes.Â
âRowan,â Aelin choked out, somehow finding the strength to stand and reach out and touch his solid, stable frame and pull him into the house, sobbing, two years of pent-up strain at last relieved.Â
âAelin,â Rowan breathed, dropping the bag in his hand and carefully pulling her into his arms, staring in shock and wonder at her and at Lana, who was in her motherâs arms.Â
It was their daughter who broke the silence.Â
âDada?â
Rowan heaved a strangled sob, nodding, reaching out so tenderly, so hesitantly, to touch his daughterâs soft cheek. âHi, my little one.âÂ
âDada,â Lana repeated, reaching out to him.Â
Aelin nodded, her sob a half-laugh, and carefully shifted Lana into Rowanâs arms.Â
The little girl stared into her fatherâs face, patting her small hand on his cheek, along the tattoos flicking up the side of his neck and onto his cheekbone. âDada daw-inâs.âÂ
âYeah,â he whispered, âDadaâs got drawings, Lana.â
He looked over to Aelin, unabashedly crying, holding Lana so gently, like he was afraid she might vanish if he so much as moved in the wrong direction.Â
âWe love you,â she murmured, taking one hesitant step closer to him, almost like she, too, was half-worried she would blink and wake up and realize that it had all been a dream.Â
Rowan closed the gap, pulling his wife into his embrace, his whole family--his whole life--united at last in his arms. His shoulders quaked with the force of his sobs as he buried his face into Aelinâs hair, hiding his tears from his daughter. When he could speak again, he heaved a deep, shuddering breath and touched the cord around her neck, tracing the way it disappeared into the neckline of her shirt.Â
She tugged it free, revealing his wedding band--Rhoeâs wedding band--hanging from the cord, glinting in the electric light.Â
âIâŚI kept this for you while you wereâŚaway,â Aelin whispered, sliding the ring off of the cord.Â
Rowanâs throat bobbed. âItâs been two years.âÂ
âI know.â An entire ocean--an entire world of grief and sadness and terror and fear and loneliness packed into those two simple words. âI know, Rowan.â Reaching down to his tattooed hand, she quietly, gently lifted his hand up, tracing her thumb over the scarred skin of his knuckles, the rough calluses on his palm, the intricate inked characters of his tattoo, some newer than others. âI love you, Rowan Whitethorn Galathynius.âÂ
âI love you, Aelin Whitethorn Galathynius,â he croaked, eyes and heart overflowing as his wife slipped his wedding band back onto his finger and softly kissed the gold, her lips caressing his skin.Â
Still perched in her fatherâs embrace, Lana clapped her little hands, babbling a stream of toddler talk of which they could only make out Mama Dada yay! âTiss!â she squealed. âTiss, tiss!âÂ
Rowan blinked. âWhat?âÂ
Lana wriggled and squirmed, so he set her down and followed her as she tugged him out to the hallway. Down to where another of Rowan and Aelinâs wedding portraits hung.Â
In this one, they were kissing.Â
âTiss Mama!â she declared, beaming.Â
Aelinâs soft laughter echoed through the hallway. âIs that what Dada and Mama need to do, lovey?âÂ
âYa!â Lana nodded enthusiastically. âMama Dada tiss!âÂ
âCanât say no to her, can we?â Rowan murmured, sliding his arms around his wife.Â
âOf course not.â Aelin ran her fingertips along his face, tracing over the new scar, her touch delicate, uncertain, yet so so familiar.Â
He slipped one hand into her hair, gingerly tilting her head up. âTo whatever end, my Fireheart,â he breathed.Â
And he kissed her slowly, tenderly, reveling in the astonishing reality of holding his wife in his arms again after two long years apart
~
A new photo hung next to the carefully preserved photograph of Rhoe and Evalin, this one framed in polished chestnut, the wood not yet bearing the grooves of many years of hands running along its surface, the glass protecting Rowan and Aelin and Lanaâs beaming faces. It was their first family portrait since Rowan returned home, the first glimpse of the three of them reunited and beyond content to bask in each otherâs embrace. Rowanâs soft, fond smile brought joy to his whole pose, his bright green eyes melting as he looked to Aelin, who had Lana in her arms, the little girl beaming at her parents.Â
There was so much happiness contained in that photo, so many months and years of quietly stifled grieving giving way to unfiltered elation. So many promises whispered in the darkest hours of the night when Rowan jolted out of troubled dreams and Aelin just held him, promising that he would never leave her again, that he would never have to leave her again. So many promises to remain at each otherâs sides through it all, complete with Aelinâs fiery promise to damn the whole world to hell if it ever tried to take Rowan from her again.
If only she could have truly made that promise.Â
~
Alanna Whitethorn Galathynius turned away to wipe her eyes with a tissue sheâd tucked into her sleeve, not needing her first appearance to reveal the bottomless chasm of grief that cleaved her in two, and exhaled deeply, squaring her shoulders as she turned back around. Her dress, dark charcoal grey material soft against her skin, matched the thick blanket of clouds obscuring the sun, matched the patchy drip of cold raindrops that spattered on the grass, the dirt, the gravel paths, the stones, matched the thick choking sobs clotted in her throat, matched the solemn emptiness that pervaded the cemetery and the mausoleum. Â
Shaking, she reached out and touched the stone in front of her, her fingertips gliding over the smooth surface, tracing unsteadily over the letters engraved into the marble.Â
Whitethorn
To Whatever End
The rain beat steadily down now, fat wet drops pouring over Lanaâs umbrella, the wind pushing raindrops past that small protection and into her dress, her skin, her hair, mingling with her tears as she closed the umbrella and tipped her face up to the sky and traced the letters on the mausoleum stone over and over and over again.Â
âIâm keeping it safe for you,â she whispered, her other hand twisting the simple golden band dangling from a fine golden chain around her neck. Rhoeâs ring. Rowanâs ring.Â
Both of them gone now, the wedding band the only thing they left behind.