by Oluse on November 10th, 2012, 8:39 am
Oluse had gone on unaware of the intense pleasure this all caused Adarin as his plans fell perfectly in place. He had blood on his hands, but spilled blood for his community for Virates for all of the Denvali pure bloods only brought him satisfaction.
Something in the Denvali boy did click, however. A foreigner crops up and Adarin, the severe Denvali loyalist concoct a plan, one that goes awry. But, it was Oluse's absolute trust in Adarin's abilities that queued him to the treachery. Adarin was too smart for one of his plans to fail. No, if a man ended up dead it was because Adarin meant the fate for him. And, if Oluse had to flee. A sudden dryness left Oluse's tongue like sandpaper in his mouth and along his throat.
Adarin had planned it all.
For the first time, the sensation of betrayal met the boy's heart, and it was crushing. He felt so low, so helpless. Most of all he felt shame. Adarin had told him he had a place in Denval, that he could recompense his father's foolishness. But, now he knew what Adarin truly felt, the truth, his father could recompense if he wished but blood is stronger than free will. He was tainted... irreversibly.
The boldest part of him wanted to scream at Adarin, to command he march to the Captain to reveal to all his acts. However, the rest of Oluse felt he deserved this for trusting to begin with. How foolish was he to let himself be strung along, to hope beyond truth that his existence could be overcome. No, hope could not undue one's body, the only undoing was a slow death of seasons stretching on with the knowledge that he was no Denvali. Not truly.
Tears plumetted from Oluse's eyes as he looked into Adarins, and perhaps Adarin knew that he had figured it out, or perhaps he simply looked like a broken ignorant child. Both were equally true. Oluse would not, no could not say a word to Adarin, his bravery was not enough. If he professed his epiphany Adarin may react with anger, kill Oluse, or what's worse deny the claims. Oluse had no room in his heart for more lies, for more doubt. He knew, beyond logic, beyond proof, what Adarin had done, and he could not risk shaking that conviction.
He turned in his place, and bolted for the door as Adarin commanded, fore Adarin's plans always worked exactly as he wished, and he wished for the boy to leave Denval now, and leave Denval he would.
The rain seemed colder than before as he barreled through it, trying not to slip upon the slush filling the streets. Oluse's mind had ceased to work, numbed by so much inundating it. He simply ran, and when he reached his house he knocked the door open for the last time with a single thunderous blow. He had expected reprimand from his parents, to have to lie to them, that his sisters would fear he get hit. The weight of that thought that he could have to look his father in the eye and lie as only dwarfed by the crushing silence that met him. His home was empty of people, and he realized that he would not see his father nor his mother nor his sisters before he left. Just as well, he wouldn't know what to say.
With haste he made for the family safe, a well crafted tomb of metal set into the floor on the first level. It took no lock picking as he reached behind the reading shelve, stacked with his parent's reference books, journals, medical records, and billing information. It took the casual brush away of a waking spider from the cold season but he found the long heavy key. As he moved to erect himself and return to the safe he saw, floating before him only a few inches away, set at the top rung of the short bookshelf, his father's medical journal. So much information his father had compiled. Oluse felt temptation, but resisted, was it not bad enough that he was stealing his father's pride, that he had failed as a first born son, but now he contemplated stealing his life's work. No, he couldn't.
He gathered the leather pack from the wall and filled it with basic survival tools, then went to the safe and took a deep breath, quivering under the weight of his emotion. He needed to. He told himself this several times before pushing the key in shaking it as the old lock demanded then twisted to pop the lock open. With some effort he pulled the heavy door open and looked down within. His parents were wealthy, though they spent much to support the family, and even more to help the community. Still, Oluse only took one pouch of heavy coins from the safe, he would count it later. He felt so much shame as he dropped it into his pack.
Just before dropping the heavy door down tight again he spotted it, revealed by the purse's extraction, glimmering in the filtered sunlight from outside. Inlaid with beautiful blue topaz the bright metallic surface of the heavy pendant of Aquiras shone with brilliance. The sight caused Oluse to stop crying, only intermittent sniffled filling the air around him. He reached down and drew it out, feeling it's weight for himself. Aquiras the god of travel, who his people once worshiped, who's pendant had been handed from first born son to first born son for as long as any could remember. He knew he did not deserve it, though at the same time he felt anger toward his parents. Locking the symbol up in the safe as if it were some dusty outdated heirloom. Aquiras may be gone, but his domain was not, he should still be important. What use did his xenophobic people have for such a relic. Indignantly he pulled the chain over his neck and let the pendant fall to his chest. He closed the safe and stood, moving tot he dusty family mirror set into a near by wall.
What looked back at him seemed somehow foreign. He was no longer the passive boy with dreams that he always saw there. He looked horrible. Cold and wet, warm and salty from the eyes, his face was inflamed and he was a thief, with that bag of stolen goods by his side, his family's heirloom around his neck. He was to be different now, a traveler, and it was all Adarin's doing. Oluse wanted to scream, but he didn't. It was time to go.
Without pause he ran to the docks, his lungs straining against his haste. He unabashedly purchased the ticket, and was surprised that the sailor asked no questions, just gave him a dubious look. Had Adarin arranged to have his exit from Denval be as smooth and silent as possible? No, if someone who knew him caught him, which was most everybody, he would be in trouble. Pendant now tucked secretly into his shirt he set out to find somewhere more private to wait till he left. He knew just the place, but his blood boiled at the thought. Danger was his life now, and he would have to accept risk to survive, this he wouldn't lie to himself about for a moment.
He knew where one person that might be willing to help him might be. He ran as quickly as he could, side screaming, to the Chapel. He stopped at the front door, panting, and waited to half catch his breath before quietly entering, hoping the rain concealed his pain. Silently he searched for the Symestra.