Ekkehardt Gehring (
spelleton) wrote in
datadiving2020-05-04 12:15 pm
into the woods
There are stories told about who lives there, in the darkness of the woods that surround Subcon's various kingdoms, where even a brave knight would fear to tread. The desperate, the ghost-touched, the people who live on the edges.
And those who embrace that border between night and day, those who live and breathe magic; the witches. Those who offer strange magic and stranger things, but always for a price.
That's what everyone says, anyway. There must be some truth to it, surely?

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"I'll be sure to give this thought exercise the careful thought it deserves, then. Hope they don't mind an angry spirit finding his way to their bedside."
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If his patient doesn't have the strength, he'll have to pull him up, but either way, he'll manage. This is the last part of the spell; all the other work is already done. After this, he can easily take the man back to be properly treated.
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Well. He doesn't know. It seems right, however, something he needs to prove to himself, and so he tries, slipping first and then trying again, letting out a triumphant little laugh when he finally manages to sit up straight.
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If he looks behind him at the vacated bed, he'll see a shadow of himself, eyes closed, face pale. There's an unearthly quality to the copy that begins to fade the longer it's observed, but in all other respects, it might as well be him.
"You have no other unfinished business, I hope," Ekkehardt merely says. "We'll be leaving shortly."
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It really was a clean break.
He looks behind him, stares down at his not-corpse, and scowls. All this time playing nice, all this time trying to be at least something of a good little prince, and this was how they repaid him...
Screw every last one of them.
"I'm ready to go now."
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"I'd like to take the scenic route, but given your condition, that will have to wait until another time." He shakes out his cloak, and it opens far larger than a normal cloak should have any capacity for, and swallows them both.
There's a disorienting moment of falling, and then he pulls Avery out of the cloak's darkness and into the cottage's sitting room once again. The cloak ruffles, tucking itself away.
"Sit, and don't exert yourself," he says, short and brisk. He practically runs into another room, and when he returns, he's holding a bottle full of what looks like a flame in liquid. It moves on its own, even while being held still.
He holds it out to Avery. "Drink as much of it as you can manage," he instructs. "It will hurt, but it will devour the poison in your body."
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Not that he won't do it. But he isn't going to like it.
He takes the bottle, squeezes his eyes shut, and downs it all as quickly as he can, holding himself back from hacking and choking until the very last of the bottle has seared its way down his throat.
He can feel it surging through his veins, and he fights and fights with teeth clenched to keep from making a sound. He can bear it. He can beat it. Even if the flames coil and dance behind his eyes, even if he can feel the ungodly heat on his skin, even though the corners of his vision blacken, beckoning him back to the abyss of sleep, he will fight it.
He won't show weakness.
He's better than this.
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Ekkehardt holds his hand palm out for the flame to light on; it's turned blue, and is smaller now.
"I'm sorry, for that." He sounds genuinely remorseful. "I didn't think someone would try to kill you, so I didn't prepare any treatment."
He looks him over with a frown. "How do you feel now?" Better, he hopes.
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"But as long as I'm not dying, I'll take it."
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He pauses on the threshold, as if he's remembered something he wanted to say.
"If you'd like to rest, you can use my bed for now. I've arranged the space where your room will be, but I thought I'd wait until you actually settled in to let you decide on the finer details."
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"And uh..." he looks away, messing with the end of his nightshirt. "Thanks."
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He tries to move, to pull himself free, to get some air, but hands with bleached, greying skin stretched tight over their bones hold him in place, dragging, dragging, drowning...
Someone laughs. Another joins them. One by one they grow louder and louder until it becomes a veritable chorus of mockery.
"Stop..."
Avery tosses and turns fitfully in his sleep, hair stuck to his sweat slick face.
The funeral shroud is tossed. His body dumped. Forgotten.
"No!"
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The shout is what brings him into the room. He's certain Avery is in no danger - not immediately, at least - but there's no knowing what kind of effects the poison might leave his patient with.
Rather than watch him toss and turn, he shakes him awake in an attempt to free him from whatever he's dreaming of - clearly not something pleasant.
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But nothing comes up. And little by little he starts to come back to reality.
"Sorry," he says after a moment, heel of his palm pressed to his eye.
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"No need to apologise," he says, a little wry. "After the amount of poison you were dosed with, I'm not surprised there might be some residual effects. People have died from far less than what you ingested, you know."
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"Then it's very personal for you." Even more so than just being poisoned himself, which anyone would hold a grudge against; this injury runs deeper than even that.
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"It was a tragedy, but hardly an accident. The second I was old enough I took measures to ensure it wouldn't happen again."
Some job he did.
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He frowns, slightly, but it can't hurt to tell him. "The land mourned for her as well." His voice is quiet. "She must have been an exceptional person."
(The land had become still; it had rained for days on end until the rivers swelled and threatened to burst their banks. He had cried, then, during those days of endless rain, though he wasn't entirely sure who or what he was crying for.
Those days had been a blur. There had been an overwhelming, suffocating sadness in the forest, then, that his mother had to fortify him against; she had often said he was a little too sensitive for such work, that she worried for him. But she had taught him regardless, as was his desire.)
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He manages to smile again, still wistful, but at least a little more genuine. "Heh. She was to me. But I guess I'm always going to be a little biased."
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He tilts his head slightly. "Shall I leave you to get more sleep, or is there anything further you'd like to ask of me? You still need rest, so I don't think you should get up just yet, but I'm happy to talk with you if you wish."
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