OOC :
|
What is conflict, if not a single instance that erases the past, changes the present and forever affects the future? ~G.K. Dalton *** 35th day of Spring, 501 AV Above Oworo's head, the birds of the sky called out to him, but he didn't answer them. Hand pressed up against the rough wood of the family's wagon, his small, frail body pressed against the spokes of the wheel, the young boy was not enjoying the pleasant morning as he watched unwavering tent flap standing silent before him. With each exhale of breath, steam floated upward, reflecting Syna's rays at the Sun goddess stood vigil above the open plains. A quick glance at the sun told the boy that it had been only an hour or so since dawn, too early to assume that the slight nip in the air was going to remain. Not that he felt the cool, Spring morning chill as it wrapped around his small frame like a blanket. No, Oworo was warm, his insides aflame, not from physical means, but from the warmth in his heart brought about by the dread, the fear he was feeling. Oworo held his breath as his eyes noticed a change in the scene before him. He could hear movement on the other side of the cloth, the irregular beat of a man moving about, only to pause for a moment before resuming his preparations. Oworo could only imagine his grandfather moving about, with his slight stoop of the shoulder that was only evident within the confines of canvas. He could only picture the unreleased tears ringing his hazel eyes, shrouded by his gray bangs as he held his head low in shame and weariness. Oworo wanted to part the flap and comfort him, wanted to wrap this thin arms around his thick waist, and hold him until he felt the reassurance, until he realized that things didn't have to change. But Oworo, crouched outside the tent, knew that things would never be the same again. Even if the hard feelings from the night before could somehow being reconciled, the memory of the encounter would not be forgotten. Oh, the mind had been clouded by the spirits and liquors passed around the night before, the mood jovial; one of Oworo's cousins had just bonded to his Strider, and the entire family was celebrating the joyous occasion. Even Oworo's older brother, Oemi, had drowned out his envy and was listening with fervor to grandfather's stories. Drunk on alcohol or drunk merely on the moment, were they all; a family drawn close through love. A family that now laid shattered, broken by a few, powerful words. Despite Oworo's youth, he had noted easily enough the sobriety brought about by his father's words that night. He had been the only man that night who abstained from the spirits, sitting on the outskirts of the campfire, arms crossed his brow creased as he brooded on his own thoughts. Oworo even saw him disappear into the Pavilion tent in the middle of grandfather's tale, but the young boy paid him no mind then; he was sitting at his grandfather's knee, listening as he spoke about days long ago. He had been so enthralled in the tale of honor and courage that he didn't realize his father's actions until the man was standing, flames dancing across the bare steel of the sword in his hand, until the challenge had been laid down. A challenge that Oworo didn't fully understand until early this very morning. All night he tossed and turned, trying to comprehend what he had just witnessed. His mind attempted to piece together all the signs, trying to develop a conclusion to this madness. The disappointment on his grandfather's face from the night before, his brooding silence the entire night, his meticulous slaving over leather with only torch as light . . . Oworo had took everything he had seen and finally decided, mere chimes ago, that somebody was going to die on this day. The tent finally parted and out stepped Morrad Birdflight, Ankal and grandfather to young Oworo. Back straight, the elderly man stood over six foot, his long, gray hair hanging free down his back. His normal, linen clothing had been replaced with armor, boiled leather that was stiff to the touch. A leather belt was wrapped his waist, a plain scabbard on his left hip, the black hilt of a longsword protruding out. Bright, hazel eyes surveyed the area, and rested on Oworo for a moment. Suddenly, with that brief connection, all the hardness escaped old Morrad. He suddenly looked the old man he was again, not the strong Ankal who had ridden against Zith and slain Glassbeaks in his youth; with merely his presence, Oworo had broken the barriers that his grandfather had built up around him. The weight of the entire situation came crashing down on him once more, and he had to look away from his young grandson to hide the sadness. When he returned his gaze back to Oworo, the young boy had risen and stepped forward. Morrad attempted to give a reassuring smile, but Oworo's dropping visage told Morrad that there was no reassurance was to be had this day. "Come, young one," the Ankal said. "Let's see what the day has to offer us." As the pair, father and son of a grand degree, drew abreast to each other, the birds above called out again. The two share a silent glance and then walked together to the area where the bird's cries would finally be answered. |