The fifty-fourth day of summer, 515 AV
Night had fallen, its darkness cloaking Keene's rocky camp in a heady blanket of humid warmth and quiet, broken only by the occasional scurrying clack of pebbles being knocked aside as eight legged foragers shifted somewhere in the distance. Though the complete darkness of the Ravine had been strange at first, as time had passed within the somber walls of the cavern's basin, Keene had found the night to carry with it peaceful breezes and a time for more than the fitful toss and turn of sleep. He had taken to speaking to the breezes as a coping mechanism for the swell of pain that would rise in his chest if he lingered on a thought for too long, something that had proven soothing in that once it had left his lips to drift in the open air, his petty concerns were given even more pathetic a form that they were much more simply dismissed. It wasn't that Keene didn't believe that Zulrav could hear him; rather, it was more that he spoke for the sake of speaking, his subconscious preferring it be to the wind and air rather than the true idea of nothingness that his more rational thoughts supported it as.
Many things weighed upon him, and Keene's voice was slow, steady, and soft, letting the words drift from him as easily as they slipped into his mind in thought. He spoke often of Boswell, of Mella, of the concepts of life and death, but lately he had found his mind preoccupied with Wilhelmina. It wasn't concern. That was something that Keene had no word for nor any desire to entertain. The winds did not need to understand him to listen, and Keene did not need to explain himself to speak, thus the meditative relationship was beneficial in that it provided just one more avenue through which Keene might better consolidate his thoughts. That night, beneath the occluded sky in the all encompassing darkness, Keene sat with back straight and legs tucked beneath him, staring blankly ahead of him as his lips moved in a soft, contemplative whisper.
"Is it acceptable to leave her as she is?" A slight breath of air had taken up claim through the sizable chinks in his stony tent, not quite enough to draw the telltale whistle of its movement, but it was hinted in its passing as it gently tugged away at Keene's thoughts. "She is a threat in her current state. I should destroy her." Without thinking, Keene's eyes instinctively moved to stare blindly into the darkness before him where he knew Wilhelmina's doll lay atop the majority of his supplies. "I should have destroyed the Nuit master." The breeze settled into an even more lugubrious pace, little more than peace and contentment drifting through its being, playing at the cool mark that adorned his back, exposed as it was to the elements it represented. "I don't know what to do with a ghost... with a child." He let out a sigh, shoulders drooping some as the breath was released before he straightened back, shaking his head. "I cannot keep her as things are." There was a slight ruffle in the air around him, the wind picking up just slightly with a bit more enthusiasm than before.
He rose, pushing himself up off of the ground, moving slowly as his legs once more found their place beneath the greater weigh of his body. "Wilhelmina. We need to speak."
Night had fallen, its darkness cloaking Keene's rocky camp in a heady blanket of humid warmth and quiet, broken only by the occasional scurrying clack of pebbles being knocked aside as eight legged foragers shifted somewhere in the distance. Though the complete darkness of the Ravine had been strange at first, as time had passed within the somber walls of the cavern's basin, Keene had found the night to carry with it peaceful breezes and a time for more than the fitful toss and turn of sleep. He had taken to speaking to the breezes as a coping mechanism for the swell of pain that would rise in his chest if he lingered on a thought for too long, something that had proven soothing in that once it had left his lips to drift in the open air, his petty concerns were given even more pathetic a form that they were much more simply dismissed. It wasn't that Keene didn't believe that Zulrav could hear him; rather, it was more that he spoke for the sake of speaking, his subconscious preferring it be to the wind and air rather than the true idea of nothingness that his more rational thoughts supported it as.
Many things weighed upon him, and Keene's voice was slow, steady, and soft, letting the words drift from him as easily as they slipped into his mind in thought. He spoke often of Boswell, of Mella, of the concepts of life and death, but lately he had found his mind preoccupied with Wilhelmina. It wasn't concern. That was something that Keene had no word for nor any desire to entertain. The winds did not need to understand him to listen, and Keene did not need to explain himself to speak, thus the meditative relationship was beneficial in that it provided just one more avenue through which Keene might better consolidate his thoughts. That night, beneath the occluded sky in the all encompassing darkness, Keene sat with back straight and legs tucked beneath him, staring blankly ahead of him as his lips moved in a soft, contemplative whisper.
"Is it acceptable to leave her as she is?" A slight breath of air had taken up claim through the sizable chinks in his stony tent, not quite enough to draw the telltale whistle of its movement, but it was hinted in its passing as it gently tugged away at Keene's thoughts. "She is a threat in her current state. I should destroy her." Without thinking, Keene's eyes instinctively moved to stare blindly into the darkness before him where he knew Wilhelmina's doll lay atop the majority of his supplies. "I should have destroyed the Nuit master." The breeze settled into an even more lugubrious pace, little more than peace and contentment drifting through its being, playing at the cool mark that adorned his back, exposed as it was to the elements it represented. "I don't know what to do with a ghost... with a child." He let out a sigh, shoulders drooping some as the breath was released before he straightened back, shaking his head. "I cannot keep her as things are." There was a slight ruffle in the air around him, the wind picking up just slightly with a bit more enthusiasm than before.
He rose, pushing himself up off of the ground, moving slowly as his legs once more found their place beneath the greater weigh of his body. "Wilhelmina. We need to speak."