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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"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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And though he doesn't say it, he's not entirely sure he should go to bed with his mother on his mind. Not after that nightmare.
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He pauses in thought. "Though if there's anything in particular you'd like to retrieve, I can do that for you. I'd offer to let you do it yourself once you'd recovered, but I imagine your belongings won't exactly be something they're willing to keep for long."
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There's only one thing he can think of that's irreplaceable. "The mask I wore as a kid. They might give it to the king, but I get the feeling they're just as likely to 'lose' it."
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"If you want me to collect any other keepsakes, then tell me now. If you don't, then simply tell me where you've kept your mask, and I'll retrieve it for you."
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"I want a cape like that," he says with all the reverence of a man staring at an endless cache of gold.
And then he comes to his senses. "Oh. And, uh. Should be in one of the chests in my room. Not sure which one. Been awhile."
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He steps out of the room with a brief instruction to Avery to not exert himself, before he vanishes into the cloak's darkness. The lamps that grant light in the cottage dim when he leaves, leaving the house quiet and dark, a decent environment for rest.
Ekkehardt's room is mostly ordinary, even for a witch. It's full of little decorations and trinkets, a desk for sitting and writing at, a bookcase full of worn, old books, a wardrobe shut tight and a chest with an excessive amount of locks in which a dozen keys could fit. Plants in bottles sit at windowsills, their curtains closed against the oncoming autumn chill. A pointed hat hangs from a hook. Somewhere, a clock ticks distantly.
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Avery immediately heads for the wardrobe to rummage around in it. (making a note to practice his lockpicking skills for the chest later).
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Most of the clothing, however, is hard-wearing and plain, clearly intended to protect its wearer from the elements and hazards you'd find in a forest. It has the worn look of something that's been washed and mended countless times.
Aside from that, there's nothing out of the ordinary. Except, occasionally, there's rustling sounds from within.
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A calico griffin that can't be more than a few months old mouths curiously at one of his fingers with its beak. Clearly finding nothing of importance, it blinks sleepily in even dim light.
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Not that recovery wasn't a good reason, but how could it possibly compare to committing the dreadful sin of disturbing a baby griffin?
He scratches where feather meets fur, and little by little his eyelids grow heavy again.
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Not long after that, Ekkehardt arrives back with mask in hand, and glances into the room to check on his patient's condition.
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