The sixth day of fall 514 AV...
Another year had passed, and yet he was still simply "Gomer Caitiff", no "Craven" at his end. It wasn't as if there was a specific requirement he had to meet, only that, of the various, ambiguous ways one might be recognized and acknowledged, he had managed none of them. Others had, all through the year, passing him by as he had become accustomed to, and while the day had been remembered by his brother with whom he had spent some much needed time in quiet camaraderie, after Godric had departed, Gomer felt the weight of his mind press in around him with a crushing force.
The failure - or more accurately denoted "lack of success" - wasn't what caught at his lungs and bore down upon his chest. It wasn't the pitiable stares he received from his cousins and uncles and aunts as they passed him in the halls. It wasn't even the poorly hidden disappointment in his father's eyes when their sparse conversations ever happened upon his training and subsequently his standing with the sisters. What ate away at him like a slow, endless rot was the guilt.
He ran a hand through his hair, mussing the fine, thickly bundled locks that were already in a state of disarray, giving him the appearance of having just walked out of a wind storm, before he pushed himself up off the side of his bed, where he had come to languish after Godric had taken his leave, and let out a slow, steadying sigh. With the sun just beginning to set, its evening light twinkling from behind the mountains in the distance, he picked up a little, yellowish pig sculpture from off of his desk, carefully setting it in a cloth and wrapping it up in his hand before setting out of his room and down the hall.
In the late evening twilight, the house creaked; its floorboards shifting under the weight of his footsteps. He proceeded down the stairs, his bare feet sending little slapping echoes about the lofty space as he descended. Making his way through the door that stood between the stairs and beneath the balcony, he quietly padded his way down the hall, taking the last door on the left that led to the manor's enclosed garden.
The air had a crisp quality to it, the sort that threatened to be chilly without ever actually following through, but he shivered regardless, pausing at the edge of the door's threshold as he uncertainly gazed out into the carefully tended hedges and rose bushes. Drawing a slow, steady, sobering breath, he set out across the flagstones, still warm from Syna's smile. His speed, which had started slow to begin with, grew ever more sluggish, his feet almost dragging as he wandered through the garden, wrapped pig held delicately in a hand that he had continually remind himself not to clench into a fist.
When he saw her, he paused again, the hesitation more powerful than ever. A small voice in his head suggested that, perhaps, she was busy - to try again next year, or maybe not at all. Just as he was preparing to retreat, finding himself not up to the task at hand after all, the rusty haired woman turned, a vacant smile on her lips as she tutted out a gentle, "Hello, young man." Feeling his throat catch at her soft words, Gomer froze in place, unable to respond and likewise unable to escape. The woman stared blankly at him for a tick or two before her sallow face turned a mellow, uncertain frown. "But you can, can't you? I... I thought you might."
"I-I can." The words finally stuttered their way out, and his feet stumbled in suit. He made his way over to her, eliciting another vacant smile that only served to make her gaze seem all that much farther away.
"You can. I can." She took his hand in her own, gently patting it with a kind but unsure touch. "He can too." Pointing upward, she said the latte in a conspiritory whisper, eyes watching for what Gomer's reaction might be, but lips already turned in preparation for a quiet chuckle.
Giving her what she wanted, Gomer wore his best smile, under the circumstances, his eyes deep and sad, as he tried out a half-hearted, "Hah." of his own. It was enough for the woman, who nodded in agreement, her own breathy laughter as wraithlike as the rest of her.
"Good good. It's good. Is it?" The question had a sort of odd, immediate desperation that tinged her features, widening her eyes and quickening her breath.
Gingerly removing his hand from hers, Gomer returned the gesture she had given him, gently wrapping his fingers around her own in a warm, loving grip. "Yes. Of course it's good." She seemed to like his response, the distress fading as quickly as it had arisen. "Let's sit, shall we?" He gestured to a stone bench that sat snug between the start of a healthy looking hedge and a slender, sturdy tree that had yet to lose its leafs. The woman nodded again, though the dull light of her eyes gave no indication that she understood. Instead, she allowed herself to be led and, when Gomer nodded encouragingly, she uneasily began to lower herself until she found she was sitting on the bench, at which point the same, vacant smile graced her lips once more as she patted the seat beside her.
"It's good, isn't it?" The desperation wasn't there; the question more rhetorical as she did not wait so expectantly upon his response. Sitting down next to her, Gomer looked down at the bundle of cloth in his hand. Already his chest felt tight, the words all jumbled in his throat, making it hard to swallow. "Ever never... never ever..." The phrases drifted from the woman's lips as she looked up at the multi-colored hues of the sunset, her cloudy eyes reflecting the scene but as if through a murky pond, much of the color sapped and leaving behind a skyscape of greys.
Opening and closing his mouth several times, each with the intention of saying what it was he had to say but stopping just short, Gomer tried to rally himself a final time before she casually laid her head upon his shoulder. Her eyes closed and she began to hum in a slow, off-key soprano. She was so calm, and the weight her head upon his shoulder lightened that upon his chest, even if for just a small time, that he instead he joined her, his own uncertain, wavering baritone following her's, their two voices softly clashing in the fading light.
The failure - or more accurately denoted "lack of success" - wasn't what caught at his lungs and bore down upon his chest. It wasn't the pitiable stares he received from his cousins and uncles and aunts as they passed him in the halls. It wasn't even the poorly hidden disappointment in his father's eyes when their sparse conversations ever happened upon his training and subsequently his standing with the sisters. What ate away at him like a slow, endless rot was the guilt.
He ran a hand through his hair, mussing the fine, thickly bundled locks that were already in a state of disarray, giving him the appearance of having just walked out of a wind storm, before he pushed himself up off the side of his bed, where he had come to languish after Godric had taken his leave, and let out a slow, steadying sigh. With the sun just beginning to set, its evening light twinkling from behind the mountains in the distance, he picked up a little, yellowish pig sculpture from off of his desk, carefully setting it in a cloth and wrapping it up in his hand before setting out of his room and down the hall.
In the late evening twilight, the house creaked; its floorboards shifting under the weight of his footsteps. He proceeded down the stairs, his bare feet sending little slapping echoes about the lofty space as he descended. Making his way through the door that stood between the stairs and beneath the balcony, he quietly padded his way down the hall, taking the last door on the left that led to the manor's enclosed garden.
The air had a crisp quality to it, the sort that threatened to be chilly without ever actually following through, but he shivered regardless, pausing at the edge of the door's threshold as he uncertainly gazed out into the carefully tended hedges and rose bushes. Drawing a slow, steady, sobering breath, he set out across the flagstones, still warm from Syna's smile. His speed, which had started slow to begin with, grew ever more sluggish, his feet almost dragging as he wandered through the garden, wrapped pig held delicately in a hand that he had continually remind himself not to clench into a fist.
When he saw her, he paused again, the hesitation more powerful than ever. A small voice in his head suggested that, perhaps, she was busy - to try again next year, or maybe not at all. Just as he was preparing to retreat, finding himself not up to the task at hand after all, the rusty haired woman turned, a vacant smile on her lips as she tutted out a gentle, "Hello, young man." Feeling his throat catch at her soft words, Gomer froze in place, unable to respond and likewise unable to escape. The woman stared blankly at him for a tick or two before her sallow face turned a mellow, uncertain frown. "But you can, can't you? I... I thought you might."
"I-I can." The words finally stuttered their way out, and his feet stumbled in suit. He made his way over to her, eliciting another vacant smile that only served to make her gaze seem all that much farther away.
"You can. I can." She took his hand in her own, gently patting it with a kind but unsure touch. "He can too." Pointing upward, she said the latte in a conspiritory whisper, eyes watching for what Gomer's reaction might be, but lips already turned in preparation for a quiet chuckle.
Giving her what she wanted, Gomer wore his best smile, under the circumstances, his eyes deep and sad, as he tried out a half-hearted, "Hah." of his own. It was enough for the woman, who nodded in agreement, her own breathy laughter as wraithlike as the rest of her.
"Good good. It's good. Is it?" The question had a sort of odd, immediate desperation that tinged her features, widening her eyes and quickening her breath.
Gingerly removing his hand from hers, Gomer returned the gesture she had given him, gently wrapping his fingers around her own in a warm, loving grip. "Yes. Of course it's good." She seemed to like his response, the distress fading as quickly as it had arisen. "Let's sit, shall we?" He gestured to a stone bench that sat snug between the start of a healthy looking hedge and a slender, sturdy tree that had yet to lose its leafs. The woman nodded again, though the dull light of her eyes gave no indication that she understood. Instead, she allowed herself to be led and, when Gomer nodded encouragingly, she uneasily began to lower herself until she found she was sitting on the bench, at which point the same, vacant smile graced her lips once more as she patted the seat beside her.
"It's good, isn't it?" The desperation wasn't there; the question more rhetorical as she did not wait so expectantly upon his response. Sitting down next to her, Gomer looked down at the bundle of cloth in his hand. Already his chest felt tight, the words all jumbled in his throat, making it hard to swallow. "Ever never... never ever..." The phrases drifted from the woman's lips as she looked up at the multi-colored hues of the sunset, her cloudy eyes reflecting the scene but as if through a murky pond, much of the color sapped and leaving behind a skyscape of greys.
Opening and closing his mouth several times, each with the intention of saying what it was he had to say but stopping just short, Gomer tried to rally himself a final time before she casually laid her head upon his shoulder. Her eyes closed and she began to hum in a slow, off-key soprano. She was so calm, and the weight her head upon his shoulder lightened that upon his chest, even if for just a small time, that he instead he joined her, his own uncertain, wavering baritone following her's, their two voices softly clashing in the fading light.