DisclaimerPossible to be considered of Mature Content. ![]() Beloved, Pain makes you fearless. In the lightning heat of its travel through you, it consumes, it obliterates. Caution dissolves beneath its blast, concern dissipates. There is only pain and pain does not care. Yet the moment its razor edge dulls to a bearable burn every ounce of courage it granted you dies, thrusting you through the floor of cowardice that bleeds the begging from your lips. It is the line between those two extremes that will break your mind. Like a trapeze artist, you try to balance upon it, the arms of your soul out-flung in reckless ignorance that this attempt will crucify you. You are ruined, however, by the driving need to be at once fearless and free of pain. Your heart thrusts itself into your throat as the first thin breath is managed through the agony and your tongue trembles on the verge of pleas and prayers. You try to hold onto it, to horde that moment, but it slips like hope away and you are begging by the time the next blow falls. - - - I thought that I knew it all I'd seen all the signs before I thought that you were the one in darkness my heart was won you build me up then you knock me down you play the fool while I play the clown we keep time to the beat of an old slave drum you raise my hopes then you raise the odds you tell me that I dream too much now I'm serving time in a domestic graveyard I don't believe you anymore ... I don't believe you never let it be said I was untrue I never found a home inside of you never let it be said I was untrue I gave you all my time - dead can dance; the ubiquitous mr. lovegrove. 1st of Autumn, 508 AV "Get up," Diarmid Bodei spat. The words were so sharp they blistered his tongue. Light pricked at the tips of waves where they were being absorbed by the horizon, the first evidence in a long while that the sun was going to make good on its promise to rise again. The Crack of Noon felt like a phantom in Leth's last hours, sails shrouding the rigging, strapped down against the storm that had walked away on legs of lightning. It had left the skeletons of the sailors still trembling with thunder while they slogged through ruins and debris, attempting to clear and repair. "Get up," the first mate said again, punctuating his words this time with a kick to the ribs of the bloody man sprawled upon the deck. In response, Diarmid received a grunt that broke into a groan. "For petch's sake, up. Up. We're screwed if you can't at least stand." A whistle sharpened the night from above, the clank of the hoist jerking up Diarmid's chin so that he could glower at the starboard rail. Curses tumbled from his mouth as he watched his captain, arm still in sling, signal a scrub rat ready the throw lines. Out of the pearl fog had long since loomed the rounded hull of their target vessel, the surrounding water throwing back echoes and booms of deck hand calls. Captain Bruin stood with lips pursed watching as the ship lulled, as the respective mates exchanged flashes of tattered flags and the man they had come all this way to meet, braving storms and gin soaked fables of giant squid, prepared to come aboard. It was widely accepted that a captain who consented to parley on another captain's deck was the lesser, the beggar and certainly not the wronged. This cold morning Captain Bruin stood with his boots planted firm as red oak roots on his own deck and knew damned well, right down to the dregs of his rotted soul, that Caius Delucia of Hanged Fate was conceding absolutely nothing by coming aboard. An agent of Rhysol offered over their upper hand only when their lower lied in wait. “Welcome aboard,” Bruin muttered while eying Delucia drop over the rail, a dark skinned mountain of a man half a startlingly graceful step behind him. Heedless of the blood the northern seas had not yet had the chance to wash away, shined boots carried the Ravokians over the boards. “Storm found you, eh?” Delucia offered by way of greeting, casting lightless eyes across the battered scene. “Amongst other things,” Bruin sniffed and rolled his injured shoulder, delivering the inquiring look from Delucia a stone faced stare. “Got m’ damned gold? Greasers down water been bitin m’ coin of late.” “How irritating,” Delucia opined, a gloved hand rising to rub a bit of left over soot from his cheek. He was peering over Bruin’s shoulder with an intensity of regard that might have cowed a lesser pirate than Amadeo Bruin and certainly set the nerves of Diarmid Bodei alight. The first mate dropped like a stone to haul with heavy hands on the shoulder of the body yet at his feet. “Well?” Bruin prompted and drew the Ravokian’s attention back to him. He had a strange face, did Delucia, at least in the eyes of the grizzled Bruin. The cheekbones were too flat in the weakly waking daylight, the mouth too bowed, the expression interminably contained no matter what emotion it was conveying. Truth was, he liked his chances better with the scar seamed monster playing Delucia’s shadow. He just could not say why. “I brought the gold. What do you have for me?” Delucia answered and then tilted his head to follow Bruin’s gesture backwards in the direction of his first mate. “A poxed sailor? Dira’s cunt, mate, let’s not be miserly.” “The sack of skin at his feet, y’ fool,” Bruin’s eye roll to the jest was almost audible. “There’s what’s yours now.” “That?” Delucia dropped his chin and lifted his eyes in the same, incredulous motion. “Look,” Bruin exhaled, swinging testily around to pace on broken boot heels towards Diarmid and his merchandise. “You went n’ sent out the call, promisin’ high pay outs. I went n’ got it, dealt with more shyke than you’d care to learn ‘bout to get here, so aye. That’s yours. Gold’s mine. Where’s it?” “Mm,” Delucia considered. Following Bruin, he balanced broad shoulders back and nudged at the blood and ink striped arm of the mostly unconscious man. “Did you seriously flog him in the middle of a petching storm?” “Storm came after,” Bruin snorted with an uneasy glance exchanged with his first mate. Diarmid crab walked backwards a few feet, wisely unwilling to remain in such close quarters with Caius Delucia’s steel toed boot. “Isn’t that interesting.” “Haste, Delucia. Know the meaning?” Black eyes lifted, catching the sharp wariness lurking in Bruin’s face. “Is he good for it?” He wanted to know. “Think so,” Bruin grunted. “How?” Bruin squinted past the patched mast and into the east. “You’ll see.” Realization widened Delucia’s eyes and as the sun finally finished emerging from the storm lit deep, the sack of skin seemed to ignite in a flurry of daylight and transformed into an ethereal, if still blood smeared, creature. “He’s good for it,” Bruin cleared his throat. Delucia’s smile cast a shadow a lifetime long. |