by Siiri on April 21st, 2010, 8:19 am
Inside the mind of the young girl, a heated debate was being waged. It was her voice, the small, soft voice of a child, against the booming voice of all her accumulated guilt, spoken by a demon that threatened to crush her very spirit. Occasionally, a third voice would speak, calm and soothing.
What kind of Myrian do you think you are, when the mere sight of a Dhani locks your joints and freezes you like a hare moments before the wolf devours it? Useless! You are filth; you are nothing! Skurak!
Do not blame yourself so. You are but a child, helpless in the face of the dangerous games the grown ups play all around you. You are not ready to take part in such just yet. Wait until you grow your fangs.
But I am Myrian! I am born in this world with fangs, they are my birthright!
You speak as if you are some great warrior! Do not delude yourself, foolish girl. Were you one, you would have wielded the sword without hesitation!
I did my best!
Calm yourself, child. You are blameless in this tragedy. Blame instead the children of Siku, for it is they that have –
Blameless? Ha! You were right there! You could have prevented the death of your aunt! If you are all you said you are, Shara would be standing right before you now instead of being a pile of ash!
Shut up!
You really are a child! Useless, trash, garbage! You’ll never amount to anything, only as a second-rate, try-hard guard watching over some nobody’s latrine! Where is the strength you oh so often boast about in your practice with the dead one? Where is the warrior? Where is the Myrian?!
Shutupshutupshut -
“ - UP! I HATE YOU!”
Siiri burst into action from her position on the floor, grabbing the hilt of the greatsword, Serpent Slayer, that sat before her. She had never held the weapon without the supervision of her aunt until now. The woman was gone. No more will she be able to teach and guide her. She was on her own.
Red-hot rage surged through her, giving her the strength to lift the greatsword up one-handed and bringing it crashing down on the wicker table where the weapon had rested moments ago. Unthinking, unseeing, Siiri smashed the weapon at anything and everything, fighting demons that only she could see. Weapons made of wood and bone shattered beneath the rampaging onslaught of the greatsword, its wielder screaming incoherently with each swing, the next becoming more powerful than the last. Not contented with the destruction she has wrought on the former belongings of her aunt, she smashed and cleaved at her furniture, sundering her bed in twain, stabbing and ripping through the animal skin hide that served as walls separating her room from the rest of the house.
Anger and hate drove her, fueling the hands that held the weapon’s hilt in a white-knuckled grip. She was furious and frustrated, at the loss of her aunt, at the Dhani that had ambushed them so many days ago, at the world. But mostly she was furious at herself. Why couldn’t she save her?!
An overhead chop of the greatsword on the writing table at the corner was her own reply to her question.
“Siiri.”
Why, when everything she had learned, everything she had been taught, were geared to equip her to react to such a situation? She was taught to fight – to kill! – efficiently and without mercy.
Repeated strikes from pommel of the greatsword smashed the small cabinet where she kept her clothes to bits.
“Siiri!”
Why had she frozen in that small raft, when she saw that the monstrous Dhani had her aunt in its scaly clutches, crushing and choking her? Why had she felt fear?
Slayer smashed against bones that served as a frame for her window, shattering them to dust.
“SIIRI!”
The girl whirled at the voice, thinking that the demon of her guilt had come to haunt her once again. A figure towered by her door, parting the strings of beads that gave her privacy from the rest of the household. Its features were covered in shadows. Siiri spun the blade above her head and swung it downwards, intending to split the skull of the invader. But the figure stepped into the light, revealing it to be her mother, Ehra. The edge of the blade stopped just a mere inch above the woman’s head. Whether unconsciously or not, Slayer's wielder was exerting near-perfect control over the weapon despite the mania in her actions. She never noticed how well she handled the blade however, for her mother’s stern gaze bored down upon her. Siiri met it unflinchingly.
For several seconds they held each other’s stare, neither one blinking. Ehra broke the spell first, moving towards her daughter. But Siiri drew back, keeping the blade between them.
“D-don’t come n-near,” the girl rasped. Her voice was hoarse from screaming, quivering from panic.
Ehra hesitated before she stopped and held up her hands in acquiescence. Siiri took that time to rip open a hole in the rawhide wall with the greatsword. She scrambled outside and ran off into the night, leaving her mother alone and sighing in her ruined room.
--------------------o--------------------
In the room adjoining Siiri’s, another girl sat on the floor quietly but no such madness touched her mind. Tala had been listening since Siiri’s initial outburst to her confrontation with their mother and eventual escape into the streets of Taloba. Tears fell freely from her eyes as she thought, falsely, that the first words Siiri had screamed were directed at her. It was she after all who had led their little party into the Basin that fateful day.
She felt responsible for the death of their aunt, Shara.
She felt responsible for the death of their brother, Habin.
She felt responsible for the death of their riamms.
She felt responsible for madness and fury that touched her sister’s heart.
Tala collapsed to the floor, finally succumbing to the pain that nested in her breast. She cried, her frail body wracked by sobs of guilt sobs. But her weeping was drowned by the sound of water droplets falling on the hard ground outside as it began to rain.
Apologies to everyone I'm threading with, but it's like the Danaides for me right now.==/==
"If it doesn't solve all your problems, maybe you're not using enough of it." - Violence