Winter the 90th, 519 AV
Hidden away in a closet in a side room off Gweneveh’s, Autumn stared at the jar that sat between her legs. She had been too afraid to use it yesterday. The possibilities were endless, but the possible repercussions were infinite as well. She read the label again.
Borrowed Life
Life. Could it really be? Could the dead be brought back? Outside the realm of reincarnation, could the dead begin life anew? If it could happen, how would it? Would she be brought back as she was now, with all her memories and experience? Would she come back as a child or even a baby, begin life truly anew? Would it just be reincarnation, just at the time of her choosing?
She didn’t know, and that made this jar and its contents terrifying. Even more frightening was the unanswered question that the second half of that title brought.
Borrowed. Borrowed from who? For how long? Did her life mean their death? Did it sap it slowly? Did it take it all at once? Could she choose who it came from?
A thought entered her mind at that final question, an evil thought, one that filled her with shame, but it had come. Maybe she could select, and maybe she could choose Madeira. As soon as the thought came to her mind, Autumn tried to push it away. Sure, she might not have liked Madeira. She may have even hated her. But that was through no fault of either of theirs. It was a matter of circumstances. It could have been any other spiritist. Madeira just happened to be the one who kept crossing autumn’s path. Or perhaps Autumn was crossing hers. It didn’t matter. They disliked each other, for no good reason in particular. It was the way it was, but that was no reason to wish ill on the other.
Another thought, perhaps as evil as the first, came next, but it was one she was more comfortable with. Perhaps it could come from an absolute stranger, someone she’d never meet, and somehow, Autumn was alright with that. If she never met the person, then she’d never know the damage done. It seemed simpler this way, neater.
But she couldn’t know who it came from, so she was still frightened to use it. The more she thought, the more questions she had. More questions just meant she had more thinking to do, but she had done enough thinking. She’d spent the entire night and day and another night doing nothing but thinking since she had received the jar from the bottom of the mysterious cauldron from Curiosities and Lost Things.
She was decided. She was going to try it. Deep down, she knew the gems inside the glass jar wouldn’t work. Gripping the lid, she pulled against it until it popped free with a rush of air that disturbed her mists, rustled them like the rush of wind through the autumn leaves barely clinging to their branches. A breath of wonder, a physical action made real by force of habit, escaped her lips, or at least the vague vicinity of her lips. Wind and air and the physical world never affected her, not like this. Maybe there was some hope in these stones. Maybe it was just Deshira’s doom and desperation reaching out to destroy one last thing.
Greedily, she held up the first jewel her hand touched. Just like the soulmist beads on her necklace, she could touch these gemstones. They were as tangible as anything she had held in life. Quickly, she pushed the lid back on firmly. Then, holding the jewel up, she inspected it more closely. It was a dark red, so dark it was almost black, and inside she swore she saw lights. It took several moments for them to come into focus, and when they did, Autumn saw the familiar constellation of Zintilla’s Fall. It had been a part of the mask she had tossed into Curiosities and Lost Things’ cauldron.
It lay there in her palm, and she considered it again. There was so much potential for good, but there was so much potential for damage. Autumn sighed. She could hesitate for eternity if she didn’t make a choice. If she kept this up, she’d outlast the gemstones themselves. If she-
Autumn tossed the gemstones into her mouth. Hesitation lost this day. For a moment, perhaps for a dozen moments, there was nothing, and the hope that had built in her sputtered and died. The part of her that had doubted the stones, the smart and clever Autumn, wasn’t disappointed. She had expected this, and that part of her tried to comfort and console the part of her that had believed. She was so busy consoling and being consoled that she missed the beginnings of it. It grew slowly, only for a moment, and then it flared, the way lightning isn’t there one moment but dominates the world the next. It was flavor, and taste wasn’t something ghosts got to encounter every day or any day, if at all.
Tossing the little gemstone around in her mouth so that it met every part of her tongue, she let the flavor overwhelm her. It tasted of starsong and light. Though these were things she’d never encountered, Autumn somehow knew that this was what that flavor was. Savoring it for several chimes more, Autumn finally decided it was time to swallow. With a gulp, the stone slid down her throat, scraping against its lining in an almost painful manner.
And then it happened, in a rush of sensation. She was suddenly made aware of the weight of her body, not that she had been large in life. In fact, she had been lithe and delicate, but compared to her ghostly form, she was infinitely heavier. She could feel her body pressed against the coarse grain of the wooden floor, the fabric of her dress against her skin. Air moved through her nose as she drew breath, bringing with it the heavily perfumed scent of the Lantern’s denizens. Textures and scents and tastes flooded her as if she had never encountered them before. In that overwhelming flood, Autumn became aware of one undeniable fact.
She was alive!
She was alive. It had worked! That thought cascaded through her head in joy, only to tumble through once more but this time in absolute terror. She was alive, but it was Borrowed Life. Borrowed from who?
Gweneveh!
Autumn didn’t know if that was the case, but she was for damned sure going to find out. Her legs shoved upward to make her stand, but they had forgotten what living was like. They had forgotten the weight of her body. As she stood, one leg faltered, and she careened sideways, crashing into the side of the closet before tumbling out and landing on her hands and knees. This room wasn’t finished like the others. Gweneveh had assumed no one else would ever see it, so the wooden floor was made of rough wood planks. As her hands caught her, splinters from the wood dug deep into her skin. Too surprised by life, Autumn had been unable to mutter an expletive at the fall or the sudden pain in her hands. Sitting up, Autumn looked at her palms and the many brown specks embedded in them. There was a moment in which she couldn’t decide what to do.
Then, she laughed. She laughed, because she felt pain. It wasn’t so much the pain as it was the feeling. She physically felt something with the flesh of her body, not just the vague torment of her soul, so she laughed. Air rushed out of her mouth and over her lips and vibrated against her throat, and she laughed at this, too. Autumn sat for several chimes as the overwhelming cascade of each new yet familiar sensation drowned her. There were so many, so many of which had gone ignored when she had first lived. She sat for several chimes and laughed until finally her body grew used to them.
Carefully and slowly this time, Autumn stood, placing her feet wide and rising in a prolonged, halting motion to keep her balance. This time, she managed to rise and stay risen, the knowledge of how to balance coming back to her almost as suddenly as life itself had. Stumbling, tripping, walking up to the door, she flung the door open only to find Gweneveh straddling a client.
She stood there several moments, stunned, then, “Gweneveh?”
For a moment, Gweneveh froze, then glared over her shoulder. “Autumn, what the petch?” Then, Autumn’s roommate realized what she was looking at. A flesh and blood human being. Where the first exclamation came in anger, the second was heavy with wonder. “What the petch?”
Gweneveh smiled and looked back at the man beneath her. “I’m so sorry. She’s a friend I haven’t been able to hug in a long time. I promise you I’ll be back in a moment.”
The man smiled and nodded, then looked around Gweneveh, smiling at Autumn with a brief wave. Autumn recognized him as one of Gweneveh’s most recent catches, and she knew he was completely smitten with Gweneveh and her seductions. Despite the many times she’d seen him recently, Autumn hadn’t realized just how good of taste Gweneveh had. He was handsome.
Dipping in close to him, Gweneveh repeated herself. “Be back in a moment, love.”
She kissed him and stood, wrapping herself in the sheets of the bed and leaving her lover lying naked in full view of Autumn. The once-ghost, living girl couldn’t stifle the blush that rushed to her cheeks as she looked away.
“See if you can’t convince her to come back to bed with you,” he called after her.
Gweneveh turned back to him, shock and consternation on her face. “Ethan! I thought you only had eyes for me?”
“I do. I do.” He held up his hands to show he jested. “I was only kidding. Come back soon.”
In a moment, Gweneveh had crossed the room. Autumn couldn’t comprehend how, but even completely covered, Gweneveh managed to make the motion seductive.
When Gweneveh reached Autumn, the prostitute’s eyes swept over her newly-living friend, and Autumn could feel Gweneveh undressing her with her eyes. Surprisingly, it wasn’t an uncomfortable feeling. Though sensual, somehow Autumn felt she was safe.
One of Gweneveh’s hands emerged from the sheet she was wrapped in, found Autumn’s hip, and slid around the back of it. “You must have broken so many hearts.”
Autumn smiled and blushed deeper at the compliment. “Far less than you think.”
Gweveneh laughed. “And far more than you’d admit to, far more than you know. I bet.” The hand at the small of Autumn’s back pulled her in close, and Autumn felt the other wrap around her in an embrace. “How is this happening?”
Autumn didn’t answer for a moment, reveling in the warmth that a hug was. Heat poured off Gweneveh and into herself, and where cheek met cheek and flesh met flesh, there was the most exquisite sensation. She shrugged. “I’m not sure. There was a jar labeled Borrowed Life. I tried it, and I was this way. I had to find you and make sure it wasn’t borrowed from you. You don’t feel any different, do you?”
Gweneveh’s lips tickled at Autumn’s neck as she spoke. “I feel like I haven’t slept for days.”
Autumn tensed at that but relaxed at her friend’s explanation.
“That’s probably because I haven’t. Ethan has barely given me a moment of free time in the last week. If he’s not careful, he’ll end up broke.”
“You wouldn’t let that happen.”
“You’re right.”
Autumn squeezed even tighter. “I’m just glad you’re alright.” She let go as her previous thoughts about Madeira came to mind. “I have to go check on a few other people.”
Gweneveh let Autumn go after another prolonged embrace. “We’re gonna have to… talk some more, when you’re like this.” Her head flicked toward the door. “Go check on whoever you need to. I have work to do.”
Slipping out of the room quickly before Gweneveh could resume her seductions, Autumn scampered out of the room and out of the Lantern. As soon as the cold air of winter hit her skin and the cold snow touched her feet, she yelped, then laughed, then decided she needed to get out of the cold and to her destination as quickly as possible. Fortunately, the Infinity Manor was on the same peak as the Red Lantern, but her feet were still going numb by the time the hexagonal house came into view.
Stepping forward, she ran into the wrought-iron gate which refused to give and tumbled over backward, landing in the snow. She laughed again. In her rush to get out of the cold, she’d forgotten she could no longer walk through walls and doors. Standing, Autumn unlatched the gate and scampered through the front yard whose snow was dotted with shoeprints and hoofprints and pawprints.
Infinity loomed in front of her. She and the house had not started off on the right foot. A small part of her hoped the manor could sense who she was and that her living nature confused and terrified the Hai out of it. Stepping up to the door, she kissed the dark wooden door.
“Hello again, Infinity. Did you miss me?”
Before the house could decide to keep her out, Autumn tried the front door and found it unlocked. Quickly she stepped inside and made her way to the fire, holding her feet dangerously close to the flames. In the cacophony of senses that was her feet regaining feeling, Autumn almost forgot why it was she had come, but footsteps approaching the room reminded her. She was back on her feet by the time the person entered the doorway.
It was Madeira, and she looked healthy. Well, as healthy as the young woman could look. She had always been a bit on the scrawny side, though entering motherhood since she had left Alvadas had managed to fill her out a little more. Scampering across the room, Autumn hoped to every Goddess that the spiritist didn’t have her crossbow on her. She caught Madeira up in a hug as soon as she was at the spiritist’s side.
“Madeira, you’re alright. I had thought the worst.”
This hug was different than Gweneveh’s. For one, Autumn was certain the participant wasn’t willing, but also the two bodies she had held were different as well. Gweneveh’s seemed to give off more heat. Madeira’s felt a little harder, bonier. It wasn’t her fault, and the warmth that did come off her gave Autumn the same sense of comfort Gweneveh’s had given. Autumn hugged a little tighter and let go, holding Madeira at arm’s length, hoping not to find cold judgment in the other woman’s eyes.
Borrowed Life
Life. Could it really be? Could the dead be brought back? Outside the realm of reincarnation, could the dead begin life anew? If it could happen, how would it? Would she be brought back as she was now, with all her memories and experience? Would she come back as a child or even a baby, begin life truly anew? Would it just be reincarnation, just at the time of her choosing?
She didn’t know, and that made this jar and its contents terrifying. Even more frightening was the unanswered question that the second half of that title brought.
Borrowed. Borrowed from who? For how long? Did her life mean their death? Did it sap it slowly? Did it take it all at once? Could she choose who it came from?
A thought entered her mind at that final question, an evil thought, one that filled her with shame, but it had come. Maybe she could select, and maybe she could choose Madeira. As soon as the thought came to her mind, Autumn tried to push it away. Sure, she might not have liked Madeira. She may have even hated her. But that was through no fault of either of theirs. It was a matter of circumstances. It could have been any other spiritist. Madeira just happened to be the one who kept crossing autumn’s path. Or perhaps Autumn was crossing hers. It didn’t matter. They disliked each other, for no good reason in particular. It was the way it was, but that was no reason to wish ill on the other.
Another thought, perhaps as evil as the first, came next, but it was one she was more comfortable with. Perhaps it could come from an absolute stranger, someone she’d never meet, and somehow, Autumn was alright with that. If she never met the person, then she’d never know the damage done. It seemed simpler this way, neater.
But she couldn’t know who it came from, so she was still frightened to use it. The more she thought, the more questions she had. More questions just meant she had more thinking to do, but she had done enough thinking. She’d spent the entire night and day and another night doing nothing but thinking since she had received the jar from the bottom of the mysterious cauldron from Curiosities and Lost Things.
She was decided. She was going to try it. Deep down, she knew the gems inside the glass jar wouldn’t work. Gripping the lid, she pulled against it until it popped free with a rush of air that disturbed her mists, rustled them like the rush of wind through the autumn leaves barely clinging to their branches. A breath of wonder, a physical action made real by force of habit, escaped her lips, or at least the vague vicinity of her lips. Wind and air and the physical world never affected her, not like this. Maybe there was some hope in these stones. Maybe it was just Deshira’s doom and desperation reaching out to destroy one last thing.
Greedily, she held up the first jewel her hand touched. Just like the soulmist beads on her necklace, she could touch these gemstones. They were as tangible as anything she had held in life. Quickly, she pushed the lid back on firmly. Then, holding the jewel up, she inspected it more closely. It was a dark red, so dark it was almost black, and inside she swore she saw lights. It took several moments for them to come into focus, and when they did, Autumn saw the familiar constellation of Zintilla’s Fall. It had been a part of the mask she had tossed into Curiosities and Lost Things’ cauldron.
It lay there in her palm, and she considered it again. There was so much potential for good, but there was so much potential for damage. Autumn sighed. She could hesitate for eternity if she didn’t make a choice. If she kept this up, she’d outlast the gemstones themselves. If she-
Autumn tossed the gemstones into her mouth. Hesitation lost this day. For a moment, perhaps for a dozen moments, there was nothing, and the hope that had built in her sputtered and died. The part of her that had doubted the stones, the smart and clever Autumn, wasn’t disappointed. She had expected this, and that part of her tried to comfort and console the part of her that had believed. She was so busy consoling and being consoled that she missed the beginnings of it. It grew slowly, only for a moment, and then it flared, the way lightning isn’t there one moment but dominates the world the next. It was flavor, and taste wasn’t something ghosts got to encounter every day or any day, if at all.
Tossing the little gemstone around in her mouth so that it met every part of her tongue, she let the flavor overwhelm her. It tasted of starsong and light. Though these were things she’d never encountered, Autumn somehow knew that this was what that flavor was. Savoring it for several chimes more, Autumn finally decided it was time to swallow. With a gulp, the stone slid down her throat, scraping against its lining in an almost painful manner.
And then it happened, in a rush of sensation. She was suddenly made aware of the weight of her body, not that she had been large in life. In fact, she had been lithe and delicate, but compared to her ghostly form, she was infinitely heavier. She could feel her body pressed against the coarse grain of the wooden floor, the fabric of her dress against her skin. Air moved through her nose as she drew breath, bringing with it the heavily perfumed scent of the Lantern’s denizens. Textures and scents and tastes flooded her as if she had never encountered them before. In that overwhelming flood, Autumn became aware of one undeniable fact.
She was alive!
She was alive. It had worked! That thought cascaded through her head in joy, only to tumble through once more but this time in absolute terror. She was alive, but it was Borrowed Life. Borrowed from who?
Gweneveh!
Autumn didn’t know if that was the case, but she was for damned sure going to find out. Her legs shoved upward to make her stand, but they had forgotten what living was like. They had forgotten the weight of her body. As she stood, one leg faltered, and she careened sideways, crashing into the side of the closet before tumbling out and landing on her hands and knees. This room wasn’t finished like the others. Gweneveh had assumed no one else would ever see it, so the wooden floor was made of rough wood planks. As her hands caught her, splinters from the wood dug deep into her skin. Too surprised by life, Autumn had been unable to mutter an expletive at the fall or the sudden pain in her hands. Sitting up, Autumn looked at her palms and the many brown specks embedded in them. There was a moment in which she couldn’t decide what to do.
Then, she laughed. She laughed, because she felt pain. It wasn’t so much the pain as it was the feeling. She physically felt something with the flesh of her body, not just the vague torment of her soul, so she laughed. Air rushed out of her mouth and over her lips and vibrated against her throat, and she laughed at this, too. Autumn sat for several chimes as the overwhelming cascade of each new yet familiar sensation drowned her. There were so many, so many of which had gone ignored when she had first lived. She sat for several chimes and laughed until finally her body grew used to them.
Carefully and slowly this time, Autumn stood, placing her feet wide and rising in a prolonged, halting motion to keep her balance. This time, she managed to rise and stay risen, the knowledge of how to balance coming back to her almost as suddenly as life itself had. Stumbling, tripping, walking up to the door, she flung the door open only to find Gweneveh straddling a client.
She stood there several moments, stunned, then, “Gweneveh?”
For a moment, Gweneveh froze, then glared over her shoulder. “Autumn, what the petch?” Then, Autumn’s roommate realized what she was looking at. A flesh and blood human being. Where the first exclamation came in anger, the second was heavy with wonder. “What the petch?”
Gweneveh smiled and looked back at the man beneath her. “I’m so sorry. She’s a friend I haven’t been able to hug in a long time. I promise you I’ll be back in a moment.”
The man smiled and nodded, then looked around Gweneveh, smiling at Autumn with a brief wave. Autumn recognized him as one of Gweneveh’s most recent catches, and she knew he was completely smitten with Gweneveh and her seductions. Despite the many times she’d seen him recently, Autumn hadn’t realized just how good of taste Gweneveh had. He was handsome.
Dipping in close to him, Gweneveh repeated herself. “Be back in a moment, love.”
She kissed him and stood, wrapping herself in the sheets of the bed and leaving her lover lying naked in full view of Autumn. The once-ghost, living girl couldn’t stifle the blush that rushed to her cheeks as she looked away.
“See if you can’t convince her to come back to bed with you,” he called after her.
Gweneveh turned back to him, shock and consternation on her face. “Ethan! I thought you only had eyes for me?”
“I do. I do.” He held up his hands to show he jested. “I was only kidding. Come back soon.”
In a moment, Gweneveh had crossed the room. Autumn couldn’t comprehend how, but even completely covered, Gweneveh managed to make the motion seductive.
When Gweneveh reached Autumn, the prostitute’s eyes swept over her newly-living friend, and Autumn could feel Gweneveh undressing her with her eyes. Surprisingly, it wasn’t an uncomfortable feeling. Though sensual, somehow Autumn felt she was safe.
One of Gweneveh’s hands emerged from the sheet she was wrapped in, found Autumn’s hip, and slid around the back of it. “You must have broken so many hearts.”
Autumn smiled and blushed deeper at the compliment. “Far less than you think.”
Gweveneh laughed. “And far more than you’d admit to, far more than you know. I bet.” The hand at the small of Autumn’s back pulled her in close, and Autumn felt the other wrap around her in an embrace. “How is this happening?”
Autumn didn’t answer for a moment, reveling in the warmth that a hug was. Heat poured off Gweneveh and into herself, and where cheek met cheek and flesh met flesh, there was the most exquisite sensation. She shrugged. “I’m not sure. There was a jar labeled Borrowed Life. I tried it, and I was this way. I had to find you and make sure it wasn’t borrowed from you. You don’t feel any different, do you?”
Gweneveh’s lips tickled at Autumn’s neck as she spoke. “I feel like I haven’t slept for days.”
Autumn tensed at that but relaxed at her friend’s explanation.
“That’s probably because I haven’t. Ethan has barely given me a moment of free time in the last week. If he’s not careful, he’ll end up broke.”
“You wouldn’t let that happen.”
“You’re right.”
Autumn squeezed even tighter. “I’m just glad you’re alright.” She let go as her previous thoughts about Madeira came to mind. “I have to go check on a few other people.”
Gweneveh let Autumn go after another prolonged embrace. “We’re gonna have to… talk some more, when you’re like this.” Her head flicked toward the door. “Go check on whoever you need to. I have work to do.”
Slipping out of the room quickly before Gweneveh could resume her seductions, Autumn scampered out of the room and out of the Lantern. As soon as the cold air of winter hit her skin and the cold snow touched her feet, she yelped, then laughed, then decided she needed to get out of the cold and to her destination as quickly as possible. Fortunately, the Infinity Manor was on the same peak as the Red Lantern, but her feet were still going numb by the time the hexagonal house came into view.
Stepping forward, she ran into the wrought-iron gate which refused to give and tumbled over backward, landing in the snow. She laughed again. In her rush to get out of the cold, she’d forgotten she could no longer walk through walls and doors. Standing, Autumn unlatched the gate and scampered through the front yard whose snow was dotted with shoeprints and hoofprints and pawprints.
Infinity loomed in front of her. She and the house had not started off on the right foot. A small part of her hoped the manor could sense who she was and that her living nature confused and terrified the Hai out of it. Stepping up to the door, she kissed the dark wooden door.
“Hello again, Infinity. Did you miss me?”
Before the house could decide to keep her out, Autumn tried the front door and found it unlocked. Quickly she stepped inside and made her way to the fire, holding her feet dangerously close to the flames. In the cacophony of senses that was her feet regaining feeling, Autumn almost forgot why it was she had come, but footsteps approaching the room reminded her. She was back on her feet by the time the person entered the doorway.
It was Madeira, and she looked healthy. Well, as healthy as the young woman could look. She had always been a bit on the scrawny side, though entering motherhood since she had left Alvadas had managed to fill her out a little more. Scampering across the room, Autumn hoped to every Goddess that the spiritist didn’t have her crossbow on her. She caught Madeira up in a hug as soon as she was at the spiritist’s side.
“Madeira, you’re alright. I had thought the worst.”
This hug was different than Gweneveh’s. For one, Autumn was certain the participant wasn’t willing, but also the two bodies she had held were different as well. Gweneveh’s seemed to give off more heat. Madeira’s felt a little harder, bonier. It wasn’t her fault, and the warmth that did come off her gave Autumn the same sense of comfort Gweneveh’s had given. Autumn hugged a little tighter and let go, holding Madeira at arm’s length, hoping not to find cold judgment in the other woman’s eyes.