《Mark of the Lash》Tears
Advertisement
“Every damn…” Werond mumbled angrily, sitting up from her pile of silks. Too much to drink at dinner, again.
It had been the beer, some from Bo’s old stash. The caravan still had plenty, and she could handle a tankard or two. Gods knew she needed it.
A black fog had seemed to settle on the caravan since they’d left Daggerford. The days had been sunny, yes, and the landscape still beautiful, with the typical Swordcoast sea of endless grassland. But not a soul on the caravan seemed to be enjoying it.
As Werond crawled out of her silks and to the back of the parked wagon, she realized that Serena was absent from her own bed, if it could be called that. She paused at the end of the frame, wondering if she should be worried.
Lord Zultan wasn’t the first death on the caravan. That ‘honor’ had been taken by Bo. Yet, somehow, his absence seemed to way heavy on the minds of everyone involved. Despite three days having passed since the caravan had moved out, Serena refused to be her normal self. She had barely signed a word since the caravan’s departure, instead withdrawing into herself, a look of worry always etched across her face. Jo was the same, doing her rounds about the caravan with a silence that Werond couldn’t figure out. Pavel, in the moments she’d seen him, seemed frustrated more than he usually was, focusing most of his energy on new measures to safeguard the caravan. Werond had yet to see Cruck’aa after that night, so rarely did he leave his wagon. She had half a mind to make sure he was still eating, yet she could never seem to muster the energy to ask. He’d just bite her head off anyways.
Even the other teamsters and caravan members seemed quieter than usual. Barely a word was spoken at daybreak when the caravan launched, and dinner, once filling the fields and forests with loud conversation and boisterous laughter, remained a quiet affair. Lord Zultan was not liked among any of them, yet something about his passing left a mark on each and every person in the caravan. A quiet reminder of their own morality, and the dangers of their work.
Though she recognized it, Werond couldn’t feel the same.
She sighed and hopped off the wagon, glad that the moon was out and bright. She waved drowsily at the horses behind them, before ambling towards the trees off to the side of the road.
There had been a numbness that settled onto her, that night after the bonfire. A kind of numb that she could hide behind. Despite what the others had said, Werond knew that she was at fault for Lord Zultan’s death; if not entirely, then partially. But she did not sink into the same depression that plagued everyone else, if only because she was used to it by now.
Werond grimaced; bad thoughts to have. She knew as much, yet it was a challenge to silence them.
Finishing her business, she ambled back towards the wagon, wished the horses behind her a mumbled “Good night.”, and climbed back in, body yearning for the warmth of the silks. Serena wasn’t back yet. Perhaps she was taking a walk in the moonlight.
Her head hit the bundle of silks, eyes already closing; she began to wrap the silks about her body, to trap in more heat, when she stopped.
From the front of the wagon, muffled slightly by the canvas covering, came the sound of someone crying.
Werond sat up, letting the silks fall from her body; at first, she swore her ears were deceiving her. But as she listened, though it was quiet, she recognized the tell-tale sign of someone – a woman – struggling to hold back tears.
Advertisement
She frowned; Werond wasn’t sure of anyone on the caravan who would come to her wagon to cry, of all things. It wasn’t Serena, she couldn’t make a sound. But the only other person she could think of was Jo, and Jo didn’t seem like the crying type.
“Gods,” Werond mumbled as she flipped off the silks and crawled towards the front. “of course this happens now.”
She stuck her head out the flaps, balancing her hands on the backrest of the bench.
In her normal spot, Serena started violently, before flipping her head away from Werond.
“Serena?!” Werond asked; she lowered her voice, eyes flicking to the rest of the sleeping caravan. “Was that you? What’re you doing?”
Without looking at her, Serena signed, “Was what me?”
Her voice quavered inside Werond’s mind, sending an ache into her chest.
“I…thought I heard something. Guess it wasn’t you though.”
“Nope.” Came a choked reply. Werond frowned and edged closer to Serena.
“Hey, what’s wrong? You sound like you’ve been crying.”
Serena didn’t respond, her hands still in her lap.
Werond reached out and laid a hand on her shoulder.
“Is there something I can do?”
Serena’s hands clenched into fists as Werond pulled her hand back. She turned away from the woods and stared down at her lap; Serena’s glassy eyes were red and irritated, as though she’d spent all night rubbing them. Werond realized that her dress tunic, sleeves normally just under her elbow, were unrolled, and stained with tear spots.
“No, I…” Serena’s hands fumbled about. “I-I just, don’t know…”
“Don’t know what?”
“How t-to talk about it, I…” Serena’s shoulders slumped.
“About Zultan?”
“Vanet.”
Werond nodded. “Right, sorry. Well…best way is to just talk.”
“But I…” Serena wrung her hands. “I d-don’t – not tonight, I can’t tonight.”
“Then when? You’ve been bottling it up these past days, it’s not good for you. You can talk to me, you know –”
Serena’s hands exploded into a frenzy, causing Werond to recoil.
“Talk about what?! That I could have saved him?! We know that Werond! We could have stayed b-but I don’t know if it would have h-helped, but we didn’t know it was going to happen we should have been more observant if I had known he was related I just!” Serena rubbed her face harshly, a shaky and exasperated sigh filling Werond’s head. “Gods if I had just been there it’s my fault!”
“Serena!” Werond whispered harshly, moving closer. “Don’t say that, it wasn’t! It wasn’t even close to –”
Serena whirled around in the bench, and fully faced Werond.
“But it’s true!” As she signed, tears began to streak down her face. “If I had j-just been there, Vanet w-wouldn’t have –”
“Stop, Serena, please! That wasn’t your fault!”
“Then whose was it?!” Werond flinched at the shrillness of her voice. “If it wasn’t mine, then whose?!”
“It wasn’t anyone’s fault Serena, none of us knew that would happen. If anything, blame Vanet’s wife!”
“But we s-should’ve known!”
“Serena,” Werond said, straightening up. “why are you so focused on blaming yourself? Out of everyone, including her, why are you the one at fault?!”
“Because I could have helped!” Her fingers flew, Serena’s voice coming out strained in Werond’s head. “I-I could’ve healed him or talked her down or just helped –”
“But so could Pavel! Or Jo, or Cruck’aa, or the guards – it wasn’t just you! Why can’t you see that?”
Advertisement
“Because it’s always me!” Serena screamed; Werond clutched at her head as a dull pain smashed against it. “It’s always me! I killed Vanet when he saw me! I fucked it up Werond! J-just like w-with everything else, with N-Ned and Bron and Mom and Dad I’m always the one who messes things –” Serena begun to shake, the tears continuing to pour down her cheeks. “E-everything that h-happens, I’m a-always the one who’s at f-fault. E-every time.” Her voice trailed off as Serena buried her face into her hands.
Werond stared at her, unsure of what to say, what she could say; Serena had been bottling up something these past days, but Werond had assumed it was only about Vanet. But it seemed to dig deeper than that.
“Uhm,” Werond began. “I can’t speak for that, but I know you Serena…whatever happened, none of that was your fault! I…I imagine it would have happened anyway, right?”
Serena dropped her hands, and stared at Werond, eyes ablaze.
“S-so I’m just suppose to a-accept that everything, everything!” she gestured wildly, “was just g-going to happen?! T-that no matter what I could have done, it all still would have gone to shit?!”
“Yes.” Werond replied instantly. “Serena, that’s just life. You can do everything right and still fail. From what you’ve told me, I don’t think there was anything you could have done before, and certainly not now. And…I think the sooner you realize that the better you’ll feel.”
Werond’s heart slammed into her chest as Serena held her gaze, hands unmoving.
Serena turned away, her lips parted as if she had something to say.
Instead, she pulled her legs against her chest, as her shoulders slumped, and broke down, burying her face against her knees as she let her sobbing consume her.
Werond felt her heart stop.
“Oh, gods, I didn’t,” Werond said quickly. “I didn’t mean it like that, Serena I’m sorry, I –” Werond cursed herself silently, before grabbing Serena’s arms. “Please, please come back in, please, I’m sorry Serena, I don’t want you to catch a cold or…please, I’m so sorry.”
Werond began to pull uselessly on Serena, as though she could have hoisted her over the backrest. Serena remained curled up, refusing to move.
“Serena,” Werond whispered. “please, I’m sorry, please come back into the wagon, please.”
Slowly, as though her limbs were made of stone, Serena began to uncurl herself and turn towards the back of the wagon. She was still crying as she did, but now uncurled, Werond grabbed her arms, and awkwardly pulled her over the backrest; her deadweight slipped from Werond’s hands, and Serena fell halfway onto the backrest, her legs still on the other side, though from her continued crying, she didn’t seem to notice.
Werond cursed every god that she knew as she pulled the rest of Serena into the wagon, gently lowering her onto the floor. Immediately, she curled her body, hiding her face in her hands.
Frustrated at herself, Werond turned away and crawled towards the silks. She grabbed her own pile, and shoved them together with Serena’s, creating a large heap of the sheets shoved against the wall of the wagon. She quickly flattened a space in the middle, before grabbing two of the largest, intact sheets, and laying them to the side.
Werond turned back towards Serena, still crumpled into a ball. She crawled back over to her and offered a quick pray to Deneir.
More gently this time, she stuck her hands under Serena’s arms, and pulled her into a sitting position. Serena feebly tried to push Werond away, as she twisted Serena around until she faced her fully. “I know, sorry, just, trust me.” She said. Werond wrapped her arms around Serena, pulling her into a hug, before scooting back, and falling onto the pile of silks, so that Serena lay on top of her.
“W-Werond…” Serena could barely sign her name, as she tried to push off her. Werond tightened her hold around Serena, and easily pulled her back down.
“I know, yell at me in the morning,” Werond said; she released Serena and pushed her slightly to the side, so that she fell into the crook of Werond’s arm.
Serena lay there, her tears momentarily halted as she looked at Werond, confusion in her glassy eyes. With a sigh, Werond grabbed the two sheets of silk off to the side, and pulled them over Serena and herself, forming a warm pocket in the silks.
“Gods, I’m sorry, I just didn’t know if…” She sucked in a deep breath and turned her head to meet Serena’s gaze. “There isn’t anything I can say right now that can change how you feel,” Werond whispered. “so, I won’t say anything else. But when I was in your place…I wished I had someone to hold onto. If…you want to just…get it out, I can hold onto you…if you want, I should have asked but –”
As Werond spoke, Serena had squeezed her eyes shut, and as Werond mumbled through her apology, a single, shuddering sob tore through Serena. She clutched at Werond, causing her heart to jump, and pulled herself in, burying her head just under Werond’s chin. Though she couldn’t hear her, Serena’s body began to jerk as more sobs, harder than before, racked through her. Werond leaned her head back against the silks, and slowly began to rub Serena’s back.
Beads of sweat began to form on her head, from the heat of the silks, from Serena pressed against her, and from her own stupidity. Werond hadn’t a clue what to do, or to say, when Serena exploded like that. Part of her was glad that Serena seemed too far gone to protest the manhandling, though the other part was ashamed that that had even happened.
Werond shifted against the silks, until her head was propped up; she could barely see Serena’s trembling hand, but it was enough for Serena’s voice to come through.
Her cry was one of guilt, a rough anger at herself for what Serena believed she could have done more. It was one that was overwhelmed by the horror of what had happened, and a desperate desire to have done something when she could’ve. Instead, all Serena could do now was clutch at Werond and sob until there was nothing left but an ache in her throat and a hole in her chest.
Werond knew the feeling all too well.
Holding back her own tears, Werond brushed Serena’s hair away from her face, wishing she could do more. The racking of Serena’s body against hers, the slamming of her heart against her side, and the wetness of her chest as Serena gulped for air, caused Werond’s body to ache.
There wasn’t anything she could say that would calm Serena down; she was well past that point. The only thing Werond could do was hold her tight and let Serena weather out that maelstrom of emotions that raged inside of her. At the very least, Werond knew that would help. After all, that’s what she had wanted, so many years ago.
Werond ran her fingers through Serena’s hair, leaned her head back, and waited for the storm to end.
Gradually, Serena’s shaking began to die down; her grip loosened against Werond’s tunic, as the sobbing quieted to a dull moan, Serena finally running out of tears to cry. Werond let out a small sigh, her fingers moving up to scratch the top of Serena’s messy hair.
“Better?” Werond whispered; the tightness in her chest loosened with the tiny nod from Serena. “I’m glad. It’s better to…get it all out anyways.”
Serena remained still against her; as Werond began to sit up, she clung childishly to her, her dead weight keeping Werond from moving.
“Okay,” she said, pulling the sheet’s tighter.
Serena held her grip tight as Werond shifted slightly, settling back into a comfortable position.
“I won’t go anywhere, I promise. Goodnight Serena.”
In response, Serena shifted closer against her. After a moment, Werond felt Serena’s breathing begin to slow, until it settled into a rhythmic pattern.
Closing her eyes, Werond let loose a relieved sigh. The ache in her chest had finally receded, replaced now by a deep lethargy.
She ran her fingers through Serena’s hair, one last time, before drifting into blessed sleep.
…
Serena groggily pushed herself up from the silks, her tunic and skirt sticking to her from the heat of the thin blankets. She was alone in the pile, the spot next to her still flattened.
The wagon shook, already moving, and the sounds of a caravan in motion filled her ears. The sun shone through the top of the wagon covering, and she realized that she had slept through breakfast…and maybe lunch, by now.
The night before flooded back to her, the events still vivid in her mind. Yet, as they did, the usual sense of embarrassment that came with anything that Werond did refused come. Rather, a warm sense of relief blossomed from her chest, sending a gentle heat through her. Though her face ached, head foggy, and her body still exhausted, Serena felt as though the black cloud from before had been lifted. At least, a little bit.
She rubbed her face and waited for the sleepiness to subside; as it did, she gripped the frame of the wagon and pulled herself up, wobbling over to the back of the driver’s bench.
The heat of the sun, and Werond’s smiling face, greeted her as Serena flipped back the canvas flaps.
“Hey,” Werond said, before Serena could get her hands up to sign. “the caravan had to move, and Pavel was yelling. Thought I’d let you sleep.” She pointed to Serena’s spot on the bench, to the plate of dark bread and cheese, and a small jug of water. “Grabbed that during breakfast, it was pretty good, all things considered.”
“O-oh.” Serena signed, her voice horse. “Thanks. Uhm…do you mind if I eat in the wagon?’
Werond shook her head. “Nope, not at all, take all the time you need. If anyone comes by, I’ll tell them you’re asleep still.” She cocked her head. “Oh, make sure you don’t get crumbs in the bed.”
Serena smiled, her face aching; Werond handed off the plate and jug to her as Serena retreated into the wagon. She placed the food and drink down, checking to make sure the jug wouldn’t tip over, before turning and popping her head back out.
“Uhm…” She fumbled with her signs as Werond turned towards her, brows raised. “I just…wanted to say, for last night, I’m sorry –”
Werond raised a hand.
“Don’t need to say anything. Sorry it was so awkward…but I’m glad I could help.” Werond, giving her a smile that warmed Serena more than the sun ever could.
Serena’s hands twitched, her mind unable to find the right words.
She ducked her head, then looked back up, before sliding closer to Werond; quickly, ungracefully, Serena planted a kiss on Werond’s warm cheek before fleeing back into the wagon
Advertisement
- In Serial64 Chapters
Wildling
Blurb: Silas--a scavenger living off the ruins of humanity--has spent his entire life fighting tooth and nail to provide for himself and his crew. But when a scavenging run goes awry and he's snatched up by an android patrol, he finds himself thrown into a cage and priced to sell as a pet. And when a suitor comes calling, he fears the worst: that he'll be turned into a Domestic, a human lapdog brainwashed into total obedience. Instead, he discovers an equally disturbing truth: that the creatures who stole his world have created a videogame the likes of which Earth has never seen; a sprawling, game-like theme park where humans are the Avatars and androids are the players who control them. And to make matters worse, his android guide is as hopeless as they come, having gotten all of her previous Avatars killed in record time. So if Silas wants to regain his freedom, he'll not only have to fight his way through a world that was specifically designed to murder him in brutal fashion--he'll also have to convince his android guide that he should be the one calling the shots. FAQS: Q: Who are you, handsome stranger? A: I'm Kyle Kirrin, the author of Shadeslinger, book 1 of The Ripple System, published by Portal Books, and I write crunchy LitRPG. Q: What is Wildling? And is it complete? A: Wildling is a crunchy LitRPG mash up of Fantasy and Science Fiction. And yup, Wildling is already complete at 64 chapters, or about 120,000 thousand words. You're looking at something like a third draft here--it's fairly polished, but it hasn't been picked over by a copy editor yet nor has my developmental editor seen it. Q: Upload schedule? A: 5 initial chapters today (2/15/2021) and one chapter a day for the next month. After that I'll probably slow down to 2 or 3 chapters a week until the story is complete. Q: How crunchy is it? A: It's pretty crunchy. I'd put it on the same tier as Ascend/The Land/RSSG, but it might be a bit crunchier than those three? Q: Is this the first book in a series or a web novel or what? And what are your plans for it? A: It's currently a standalone with series potential. Full disclosure: this story may head the way of my publisher eventually, but will be available on RR for quite a while no matter what. Likely several months after it's complete with plenty of warning before/if it's taken down. Q: What kind of build does the MC create? A: Sword and board! Q: Crafting? A: Plenty! Crafting isn't as center stage as it is in The Way of the Shaman, but it's close. Q: Base building? A: Two fully separate, distinct bases, both of which play a major role in the story. Q: VRMMO? Portal? Reincarnation or what? A: This one's a bit tricky. Basically an advanced race has created a game-like world that closely resembles a theme park. Think Westworld but with copious amounts of loot. And the MC has to fight his way through that to earn his freedom. Q: Permadeath? A: Nope! The MC gets 3 lives to play through the entirety of the game world, and death is extremely punishing, but not fatal. Q: Harem? Or romance? A: No and no. Q: Cursing? Blood? A: Quite a bit of cursing, yeah. There's blood, too, but it's not a gory book by any means. Q: How can I support? A: Instead of a Patreon/donations etc, I'd ask that you consider giving my debut LitRPG Shadeslinger a chance. It's free on Kindle Unlimited and the audio is already out narrated by Travis Baldree. It's an epic fantasy VRMMO where the main character gets 3 days of exclusive access to a new game plus a snarky, talking axe to guide him through it in exchange for agreeing to become the target of a serverwide manhunt once the Head Start period ends. Q: How's it similar to Wildling? And how's it different? A. The crunch level is very similar, but Shadeslinger is a much lighter, epic fantasy take on the genre. It's also VRMMO, but without any real world components aside from the first chapter. The MC is very different--he comes off as a bit of a jerk early on and can take a bit to warm up to, especially before his backstory is revealed--but he's also got a talking axe that constantly puts him in his place. Shadeslinger's a much more humorous story in general, and it's a great deal more polished as well. Thanks for reading! I hope you enjoy Wildling!
8 346 - In Serial26 Chapters
Everyone Loves Min-maxing
Daniel hates min-maxing. While other players are trying to speed run the tutorial of Edenquest Online as fast as they can to min-max time wasted in the tutorial, Daniel discovers an error in the tutorial... ----- This is a story about a merchant class main character who has curveballs thrown at him left and right, and must make on-the-fly decisions under pressure with incomplete information. Sometimes his decisions are right, sometimes his decisions are wrong...
8 178 - In Serial13 Chapters
A Demon, Probably
For a demon, Bal isn't that bad. Being bad is unfortunatly a rather large part of being a demon. Stuck among the lower rungs of demonic society, Bal has had to make a living using his cunning to trick the most distrusting creatures in existence, but all that changes when a portal swallows him whole and he is summoned to the world above hell. A world ripe with the two things Bal loves most: oppurtinity and fools. Along with his two companions: Ell, a young princess hunted by her murder-happy siblings, and Cas, her sworn protector with too much bravery and too little brains, Bal sets out to see what this world can offer a resourceful young demon.
8 188 - In Serial19 Chapters
Bug-Hunting as a Heretic
Reincarnation. A new world to explore. You might see it as a second chance to fix things. To become someone else. To finally be the person you always wanted to be. Daniel does not see it that way. He does not need to be fixed and he does not want to be someone else. Whatever else changes, he at least has confidence that he can remain himself. Sadly for Daniel, no one cares what a little kid thinks. Fortunately for Daniel, no one cares when a little kid makes a fool out of themselves.
8 112 - In Serial20 Chapters
The Pokemon Emissary Among Worlds
Author's disclaimer: I'm not that good in written grammar and I want to improve it by writing stories. Constructive criticisms are always welcome. Read at your own risk. After dying, Okami Okaya was transmigrated into a new World, realizing that he had been chosen to become the emissary of Arceus to spread Pokemon among different worlds. Naruto summoning Ninetales? Ace flying on Charizard's back? Spiderman fighting alongside Ariados? Okami will teach them how to become a great Pokemon trainer. All rights belong to Pokemon and Naruto
8 157 - In Serial12 Chapters
My Second Life is an Absurdist Power Fantasy?!
"Hey, great news, kid... you're dead!" With these words, Jack Eames, unrepentant slacker, found himself staring down God, and was offered a choice- An eternal life of never-ending bliss and relaxation, OR the chance to start over as a powerful hero, fighting to defeat monsters, rescue maidens, and save this new world from another player - a villain who has been given the exact same advantages he has. ...And a couple weeks head start. The ultimate prize? The winner of the contest gets to become God of this new fantasy world, and reshape it however they can possibly imagine! The downside? Whichever one of them loses ceases to exist! For Jack, a clueless, fantasy-obsessed shut-in, picking option number two wasn't hard. Learning that being a hero takes much more than pressing buttons on a controller, and that a real fantasy world is far more dangerous than the ones in stories he loves.... well, that's something else entirely!
8 203

