Timestamp: Winter 509 AV He worked too long and too hard to simply give up. It wasn't in his nature. The face of adversity wooed him. Sang a twisted siren song into his heart and into his mind. Failure never presented itself as an option. He embraced the devil, if that's what people wished to call it. This thirst for knowledge and with knowledge came power. Power to shape. To create. To make manifest the unbelievable. The unthinkable. Myth into reality. Sometimes he turned reality into myth. It came down to the same thing in the end. Knowledge. Secret, sacred, profane knowledge glittering at the heights lesser men only dreamed of, and that just barely. To say he was dissatisfied with his life, and thus his accomplishments, would have been far from the truth. If anything, he reveled in it. Delighted in it with childish pleasure. He would never let it go. He sat in a still-quiet room, tailor-style, on the thick carpet woven in curlicues of cinnabar and umber. Small rosettes in pale pink and subdued amber bloomed in the dark vines of thread. A lush landscape of design, wrought with hidden meanings, a story in their warp. Though he hadn't purchased it for the tales it might have told, but for the simple aesthetic value. It looked well on the honey oak floor polished to a shining gleam. It suited the carved pieces of dark hardwood crafted into an elegant desk and matched chair where he usually sat to write and catalog his thoughts and progress in his work. It licked against the edges of a chaise cushioned in pallid green velvet. The glass of the barrister bookcases, so tall and imposing, caught the colors at moments and they played along the leather bindings of rare books bought all across the world. Most of all he liked where the carpet ended. It stopped two inches short of a long filigree stand made of burnished steel. At the time of conception and then construction he searched for something more fitting. Glazed alabaster, perhaps. Or marble made into delicate finials and sweeps. However, he worried that the weight wouldn't hold with alabaster and marble was merely common. So he commissioned a well known metal sculptor and explained to him what he wished. A slim stand, six feet long standing two and a half feet high. He detailed the shape and the interwoven pieces he expected to see as one finished and complete piece. The sculptor who never in his life had been asked for such an extreme work of art took the project on. In part because of the man who asked him to fulfill this dream, but mostly because he realized this would be his lifework. And it was. The sculptor never made anything else again. All the vision and inspiration sank itself into this strange request. He mourned the loss, but the finished object ceded his wildest dreams. At least his final work, what he poured his soul into, could be given nothing less. It had everything. In the end, his life as well. The sculptor died six months after completion. His passing came with sadness in the artworld and people wondered what he did artistically in the last three years of his life. They would never see his final gift. Nor were they meant to. At the same time this metalwork was being constructed, the man who sat on the carpet employed another person to aid in this task. One of his gifts was realizing fully where his talents ended and another's began. This second artisan was known for her beautiful glass. Mouth blown, amazing one of a kind pieces in delicate colors that swirled and listed into each other. Each curving and sensual as if she caught the very essence of the Eternal Nymph, the True Woman in nothing more than melted sand. From her he asked for a slim box of opaline glass to be six feet long and one and half feet in depth. He specified that no colors were to be used save at the very edges and that he would like to be representing life. However she saw fit as he deemed her worthy enough to understand what he wished for. It was to be strong glass, but look fragile as a soap bubble. The glass blower pondered the puzzle of making something like this. She worked with various designs and finally discovered one her patron exclaimed over in true joy. She never met the sculptor, though she shared experiences with him. Six months after her beautiful cask, for she couldn't think of it as what it might have been, was finished, she left the world. The taxing event of creation wasted her away. Again the artworld mourned the passing of such a talented artist. Again none saw what her final piece had been, what took her soul in the two years she worked on it. Again, they were not meant to. But now he had this marvelous piece of art. This object which surpassed what he even dreamed could be. He picked the artists well and in his way congratulated them on a job well done. Their deaths were nothing more than the price which had to be paid. Because sitting on the undulating form of the steel and under the glass with its pale green arabesques was the true prize of his collection. The object of all objects. The altar where he worshipped. She slept under glass. Never in his life did he ever encounter something so beautiful as she was. Or, at least, he didn't believe he had. True, he collected countless women over the years. Blondes, redheads, brunettes in all manner of shapes and sizes from places in the world people never even heard of. But those compared very little to her. She was tall, though not as tall as the glass cocooning her. A few inches gave on either end. Slender limbs with fine bones underneath. He believed her bones to be hollow as when he lifted her for the first time she seemed to weigh next to nothing. He supposed he could have weighed her, but somehow in doing that it seemed wrong. Touching her skin was akin to running his fingers along satin of watered amber. Nearly a gleaming white, he thought so at first, until he saw her under better lighting. Palely colored, just enough to hint. Not the deep bronze or rusts that came with sun worship. Merely a gloriously warm undertone. As if sunlight dripped onto snow. At first he enjoyed to hold her still hand in his and trace along the breakable bones. Marveled at her sleek make while still retaining noticeable female assets. A welcoming curve of high breasts that made him think of young goddesses. A waist he could nearly span with his hands she was so slight, yet graceful hips followed down to legs that stretched endlessly until her toes. He stroked his hands over her in wonder and quiet awe. He dressed her in gossamer beaded with crystal that draped over her, revealing nothing and hinting at everything. He tried to remove the gold bracelets from her wrists, but they were welded closed and upon closer inspection (as he originally wanted to have her decked in silver and white) he saw they were carefully twisting vines. He simply changed the color of her gown to topaz. He delighted in twisting her blood-copper curls through his fingers. He read descriptions of hair like hers, heavy and silken, the kind men would climb up for a kiss or a witch might to punish. Waves and ringlets frothed in the way modern women tried to emulate and never fully accomplished. She made no sound at all when he ran an ivory comb through her shining locks. At those moments he imagined he held pieces of flickering flame or that someone's life spilled out across his palms. He often traced the gentle rise of her cheekbones, sculpted so delicate in their height that shadowed hollows were noticeable. They weren't sharp. None of her features were, save for the angled nature of her jaw which led him to believe she bore a strong personality somewhere under it all. Long lashes of smoked ember hid her eyes away and he never found it in himself to open them to see what color they might have been. Ink brush brows a bit darker than her fabulous curls arced. A slim nose, perfectly straight save for the most minor bit of a snub on the tip. As if the creating god gave her a playful tap. Her mouth was the sort meant to be kissed, possessed and plundered. He stroked his finger over the petal pink lips and smiled. And still, she slept. Most of the time he was content to just let her be. To leave hersleeping in enchantment or damnation as he didn't know which it mighthave been. Not that he cared for without that sorcerous sleep hewould never have found her. So he cared little that she never moved, never uttered a sigh, never laughed or wept. Perhaps she didn't evendream. He could only speculate in those areas. This was not to say he didn't intrude upon her peace. For he did.vShe merely acquiesced in compliant silence. For all of the detailed attention he gave to her, arranging her hair and clothing into luscious affairs, he found himself unable to help himself to her. She was warm with a slowly beating heart and shallow draws of breath. Warm with smooth skin hiding an athlete's muscles. Though he imagined she wasn't merely some long distance runner or such. She'd been made for grace. At those moments, when he found it too difficult to bear, he opened the glass and lifted her out. He would carry her to the chaise he placed in the room for this one singular purpose. With respect and adoration he removed her garments and folded them neatly to the side. Then he would trace his way across her body. Hands and mouth. Tasted the sweetness of her skin. Caught the drifting scent of applewood and autumn. Spent himself between her parted thighs as she slept on without rising to meet his passion or denying him. He tried to pleasure her, to give her something for the glory she gave to him, but the physical response was only that, physical and static. He would have sold his soul to hear her cry out and to feel her long fingered hands twine into his hair. But it had yet to happen. He believed and he hoped that one time it would. He would wake her like the prince with the briar rose princess. After, he washed her. Cleaned himself away from her. Used only the softest of cloths and towels. The finest milled soaps. The best washes to kept her hair radiant. Then he would dress her once again and return her to the glass bed he fashioned her out of a darkly tortured love. And in the wake of it all, he would come to sit tailor-style on the thick carpet on the glossy wooden floor where he would pray and pray and pray. Yet, still she slept. - - - Gravity had never been of much concern. The falcon had flung herself off an eyrie time had carved into the ceiling of the subterranean city to spiral down, seven deep and down, past glowing orbs of places called home by different souls strung from the roof of Kalinor. A mockingbird might have cried from the branches of a funeral oak somewhere hundreds of feet above, exasperated with the too swift sink of the winter sun. It left a lavender ribbon over the horizon and the rain dripped from the ears of glossy bannana leaves in a hundred shades of dying stars. Maybe somewhere pewter windchime clanked a grumble and the mockingbird quieted itself with a huff and a wing, spiraling over towards the forest's edge to find happier companionship. Pale light could have mingle with what moonlight might ome through storm clouds blowing away; and it could have slid over blue black feathers. But it didn't. It was raining up there, somewhere, and she had nothing to do with it. The hollow, the ache, seemed to whisper and swell. A ghost limb she was constantly turning towards in her sleep, reaching out with, grasping nothing like a cemetery of kisses with fire still to burn in her soul's tomb. As if the fruited boughs of power still burned, pecked at by the birds. Each drop felt like an arrow shot. The seconds were ticking down to witching hour and, somewhere, peck, peck went the birds. Drop, drop went the rain. Half-life, wraith woman. Foot on shore, foot in sea. Drip-peck-drop, darling.. Darling.. That was what her father cried somewhere, rolling over and over again at his wife and child's loss. But no ghosts bent from imagined tree branches or spun up the path. No memory to shape on the steps because they were gone. Cut out. All cut out. Ancestors, descendants. Family. Gone. It was like muted genocide and even the elements seemed to scream a little softer now, a little softer. It was raining, and she had nothing to do with it while diving through the gloom of the spider's web, circling the familiar stalactites until coming to a land upon edge of the Orchard Market upon the thick weave of a cerulean thread path. Wings caught light otherwise unknown the aphotic dim of this place, shifting unto glittering before undertaking reformation into a young woman. The draw string trousers and loose chemise previously dropped by curving claws was lifted while hawk's eyes in a girl's face peered out over the the patrons and wares. Clothing donned with no terrible haste, she blinked and tested the strength of her weight on the path before moving forward, setting out again into the only world she had ever known. |