《The Wedding of Eithne》Chapter Five, Scene Twelve
Advertisement
The defiant voices of the Droma-men rumbled through the darkness.
Oh-hooo…
You'll never beat the Droma
No matter what you do
You can put us down! And keep us out!
But we'll come back again!
Eithne shook her head at the brave, resilient fools as she limped to the edge of their camp.
You know we are the fighting Droma
And we'll fight until the end
You know you should have known
You'll never beat
The Droma!
The sentry on picket stopped her for a moment, then gaped at her. “My lady?”
“Aye. I’m sorry, Gaeth. I’m afraid I don’t know the password.”
“Oh, no matter, my lady, no matter.” He waved to a pair of passing soldiers. “You there. Escort the lady straight to the king’s pavilion. Hop to it!” Gaeth knuckled his forelock. “Good to have you back, mum. Any word of the king?”
She gritted her teeth. “No, damn it. Not yet. But believe me, I intend to get some.”
Gaeth’s eyes rounded at the expression on her face. “Gods help ‘em when you do, my lady.”
“Aye.” She patted him on the arm as she passed. “As you were, Gaeth.” She looked back beyond the sharpened birch stakes of the camp. “There are strange folk abroad.”
The soldiers took her to her father, who sat in council with Medyr and the Lord Lorcán in the king’s pavilion. The Lord-Drymyn took one look at her and hustled them off before she could get a greeting out of her mouth.
“Out, both of you. You can see she’s wounded. We all have questions, but questions will keep! Out!”
The first honest relief she’d felt all day flooded through her. Medyr had earned her trust on their long dangerous journey to the Vale. She raised her hand to stay Father’s objections. “It’s alright. Please. I need his attention before yours.”
They scowled deep in their beards, but went as they were told. Medyr found a cup of honest ôl for her and fussed over her wounds.
She leaned over her knees as she sat on the field cot, sipped at the stout brown drink, and told the priest her tale. Medyr dabbed with a linen cloth at the painful bite on her shoulder, and she winced.
“You say bats made these wounds?”
“Aye. Monstrous bats.”
Medyr lifted her arm to regard the puncture wounds. “Mmhm. They would have to be, wouldn’t they?” He pressed the linen against the fang-marks.
Advertisement
She winced. “Ow! Are you almost done?” She’d pulled off the ruined linen gown to let Medyr do his work, but her bare skin prickled and her nipples hardened in the cool evening air. The fire burning in the pit at the center of the tent did little to keep out the chill.
“Hush.” Keeping his eyes studiously on her wound, he handed her a blanket, then poured a foul smelling linament onto the cloth and pressed at the wound again.
She hugged the blanket to her chest.
“There’s a risk of fever, my lady. Less monstrous bats, they are sometimes mad. Like dogs become mad.”
Fear settled into the pit of Eithne’s stomach. Dog-madness was no idle threat.
He knelt to examine her leg. “That Belenosian priest bandaged this?”
“Aye.”
He harrumphed. “Well, I can’t say he did a bad job of it.” He clapped her on the knee and rose. “In any case… I’m finished for now.” He dropped the soiled linens into a brass basin. “If you feel any tingling at the site of the wounds, let me know. Gelynion recommends a preparation made from the skull of a hanged man. No doubt we’ll have plenty of those hereabouts before too long.”
She thought of all the bandits and Cailech-men that had attacked their caravan on the trail. “No doubt.” The priestesses wouldn’t judge kindly those who’d brought war to the very mouth of the Vale. There’d be hangings for sure.
A servant had been sent for her baggage, and Eithne pulled a fresh tunic over her head. It settled on her shoulders lightly.
Medyr scowled at her as he washed his hands and wiped them on his light blue robes. “You should have stayed at the temple, my lady. You’d be safer there.”
She put her injured leg gingerly into a pair of leather breeks, then the other leg, and stood to pull them to her waist. “Thank you, Lord-Drymyn, but I can’t think of a safer place than with the men of Dolgallu and Droma.” She cinched the breeks into place on her hips.
He gave her a dead stare. “Then you haven’t thought very hard on it, my lady.”
“Tell me something.” She squeezed her hand into her leather bracers and tightened them over her wrists. “What quarrel do these reformationists have?” Her meeting with the Belenosian pilgrims troubled her. Something about them seems… not right.
The Lord-Drymyn tugged at his beard. “Well, that’s not so easily told, but I’ll do my best.” He leaned back on a table formed of boards and crates. “The invasions of the Sea-Foreigners on our southern shores separated us from our Súthrhaman Brethren for many years. Many of their observances and practices have been forgotten. In some ways, we’ve returned to the sacred practices of our ancestors, before we knew Súthrhaman ways.” He paused to pour himself a cup of ôl.
Advertisement
Eithne pulled stockings onto her bare feet, and then soft leather boots over them. “So we don’t worship the Gods the way those in other lands worship them?”
Smacking his lips, Medyr nodded. “No, it’s not so much about how we worship the Gods—they have theirs, we have ours, and each Circle respects the Gods of the other Circles. No, it’s more about how we drymyn do things. Like when we celebrate the feast Damara, or how folks should be married, and how often. Or—” He reached up and rubbed at his head where it was shaved from ear to ear across the front, then ran his hand through the hair knotted and braided from his crown to his shoulders. “—how we should wear our hair.” He shrugged. “Anyway, these Súthrhaman reforms challenge the ancient practices to which our own Circle has returned.”
“So they would have us practice as they do?”
“Aye, my lady.” He lit his pipe from a taper, puffed at it until the leaves burned steadily. The smell of burning mulch filled the tent. “Though we are all Drymynnists in name, the reformers consider us pagans and heretics. They believe there must be a single, universal way for a Universal Brotherhood to practice its rites and rituals.”
“And you don’t agree?”
Medyr shrugged. “It was the practice in ancient days for each Circle of drymyn to govern itself, without foreign interference.” He puffed on the pipe, hocked back, and spat into a brazier. “I don’t see why we should change our ways simply because the drymyn of a foreign land couldn’t manage their own affairs.”
Her father’s voice called through the tent canvas. “Eithne?”
She pondered the drymyn’s words a moment, then: “Aye, come in.”
The canvas flaps parted. Father, tall and lean, wore the black, gold, and red tartan of their clan draped over a jack of ringed mail. Behind him came the Lord Lorcán, her would-be husband’s brother.
Father’s worried glance took her in, before he turned it on Medyr.
“She should be watched for fever, my lord.”
Eithne fetched the priest a warning look.
But the drymyn reassured him. “Otherwise, she’ll be sore for several days, and that’s the worst of it.”
“Thank you, Lord-Drymyn.” Then Father hissed at her. “What were you thinking?”
Eithne reached for her own coat of ringed mail and leather. “I’m fine—”
“Fine? You show up here, muddy, wet, and bloodied—!”
“I’m fine!” Anger flashed through her as she winced into the weight of her own harness of steel-rings and leather. “And you’ve no idea what happened up there, Father. I—” How can I make him understand? Fear and dread clutched at her throat. “I saw— Unnatural things—”
Lorcán stood fidgeting beside Ciaran, eyes downcast, but he cleared his throat and interrupted then. “My brother?”
Fear and anger rippled through her at the memory of Eowain, wrapped in funereal linens, arisen from that dread cauldron. “They said he’ll be well, but I don’t know where they took him…”
Lorcán’s concern was not much relieved.
“But I’m damned well going to find out.” She owed Eowain that much at least. He’d been kind to her, fought to defend her. He wanted their marriage to be an agreeable one and honest, not merely some political maneuver. He didn’t deserve to be kept a prisoner.
She buckled her armor’s weight down over the pain and bandages, then belted on her sword.
Father scowled at her. “What do you think you’re doing?”
“Going back to get Eowain. They’re holding him prisoner up there, as they would have held me.”
Medyr snorted. “Nonsense. They wanted to keep you safe.”
“Against my will.”
Father shook his head. “Medyr’s right. You aren’t safe here.”
“So Alva said.” She shook her head. “When will you all learn I’m not afraid to defend myself? And someone had to come and tell you what happened up there. We can’t just leave Eowain there.”
“Eithne, be reasonable! Even with the two dozen men Fethgna brought, we’re still not—”
“Wait— My brother’s here?”
“Aye, and your aunt and your mother as well, but listen—”
A guard put his head through the flap of the tent. “Lord Lorcán? There are men here from King Ardgar of Ivearda. They insist on speaking with the Lord Ciaran.”
Advertisement
Global Lord: Building A Magical God Realm From Scratch
It was a time where everyone had a chance to become the Lord of a land. It was a world where magic existed, where legends were real.
8 1570The Blood We Are Born In
In this land nobles rule over the peasants, not only by right, but by their magical powers passed down their bloodlines from father to son. The powerless have no choice but to serve. But these are troubled times. War, conspiracies and revolutions spread through the land, bringing conflict and suffering along with the promise of an uncertain future. It is on this stage that a lowly mercenary of mixed blood meets the royal heir of an ancient bloodline. This is their story. Cover art by Nicole Cardiff This story is currently abandoned, and will not update.
8 115I Died. But I was Reincarnated as a Rock?!
Angus was a successful person in life. But due to misfortunate tragedies and with his misfortunate cause of death. He was reincarnated into a fantasy world full of monsters and magic, yet: as his latter form in such said world; HE WAS REINCARNATED AS A ROCK?! *All names that do not belong to this book is respectfully only used for references. I do not own ex.Dragon Ball/Ichigo/Madara/Toriko, or something else. Only just for references. *I do not claim to own any IRL songs/names used in here as well. I just really love them. *With respect, I urge you to listen/watch some of them on Youtube in case you haven't heard of them. Pretty good stuff. *Lastly, enjoy reading! Because I love to see my readers enjoying this novel.
8 159GIG: God In Gold
So let's cut the pretense: this is some garbage-tier weaboo fiction. I have no idea what I'm doing, but I feel it's important to say that this is some nonsense I write for fun. I don't think it's very good. I'd even go as far as to say that I'm not a good writer at all. I picked up a ball that started rolling when I was a kid and have been intermittently punting it towards the next chapter whenever I feel like it. And you can come on this garbage ride too if you really feel like it. Who knows, maybe there's some gold to be salvaged from this dumpster fire? Synposis: Satou Shibuya is a first year student at Niflheim's Kawagusa General Academy. He's also the self-proclaimed strongest power user, sporting a big enough number on his birth certificate to make a nuclear bomb glow green with envy. There's something to be said about a person whose head is so far up their own ass that you find yourself watching their every move with bated breath, ever curious to see which hole they'll dig themselves into next. This is not that kind of story. This is a story about pride, coming of age, but actually, this is a story about big, stupid superpowered fights. Update Schedule: Whenever.
8 183Stairway to Heaven
Humans are complicated, awfully fragile beings, far too weak to survive amid the other extraterrestrials that lie dormant across the galaxies. Instead of physical altercations, they would rather engage in verbal abuse, breaking an individual's psyche as a hobby. They excel at deception and manipulation, far too interested in bringing their brothers and sisters down and reaching for the top of their self-made hierarchies. Beyond their questionable nature and moral compasses, they long to find meaning in their lives and put names to the feelings that drive each passing moment. They are insatiable—far too greedy for more knowledge and a supposed understanding of their lives. It's pitiable, really, the way they struggle to find themselves while ravaging their kind through petty wars and conflicts built off of misunderstanding. Humans are complicated, awfully fragile beings. They created words and languages to fill the holes that lived inside their souls, desperate for ways to find meaning in their incredibly short lifespans. They'll waste their entire lives trying to find their so-called passions and reasons for living, acting as if they truly rule the way their lives go, supposed "controllers of their own destiny." Yet, they cannot evade the inevitable visit from death, who stands next to them, ticking the seconds down until their demise.
8 98DICE
As people around Evan start disappearing, he begins to suspect that his overprotective parents are involved. And when he wakes up alone in the basement, trapped, he learns just how far a parent's love can go...
8 188