28th of Summer, 517
"For want of a nail, the shoe was lost
For want of a shoe the horse was lost
For want of a horse the rider was lost"
Madeira's voice cracked like a teenage boys as she sang half forgotten nursery rhymes to an abandoned house in the ghost town. It had been a hot day, and the smell of crumbling wood and baking earth rose from the cracks in the floor. Syna's light was filtering through the broken windows at a slant now, and it pooled in the circles under Madeira’s eyes and in the ridges of her collarbones over the tight collar of her dress. Gods, she was tired.
"For want of a rider the battle was lost
For want of a battle the city was lost
And all for a want of a horseshoe nail."
Dimly she wondered why she didn't know any cheerier songs.
Despite her attempt to placate through inept singing and dour songs, the Vantha ghost refused to show himself. The Spiritist had checked for cold spots, sniffed for unusual scents, looked for flickering in the dark corners, and found nothing. She had been chasing the little boy most of the day in a perverse game of hide and seek, having gleaned from more cooperative ghosts that this boy was what was left of Coren Snowsong. He was ten years old, stubborn and petulant, and was showing early signs of veering into 'vengeful spirit' territory.
Madeira stood in the middle of the empty house, hands on her narrow hips and expression stressed underneath a forcibly benign smile.
"Coren? I'm done playing games. Come out. I just want to talk."
Silence.
"For want of a stone," she began again, pressing the heel of her hand against her eye, where a headache was brewing, "the mill was lost,
For want of a mill, the flour was lost
For want of flour, the bread was lost
For want of bread, the people were lost-"
Small hands sunk into Madeira's lower back from behind her, and there was a blinding, indescribable pain at having her soul touched directly by the ghost. Her eyes rolled back, her body spasmed, and the Spiritist crumpled like a broken marionette.
"You're it!"
A childish voice trailed cruel laughter out the door as Madeira rolled to her feet, flushed and gasping.
"Coren!"
She followed the voice out of the house and onto the street. A few living people were making their way through the dilapidated town, their expressions as grim as the broken houses that surrounded them. And behind dirty panes of glass, narrow alleys and shuttered gates the murdered Vantha's watched them go. Madeira let a strangled, frustrated sound crawl up from her throat. Where did he run off too?
"Tag! Tag you're it!", she called, her voice thin and high as she tried to rile the spectre.
She must have looked like quite the loon, turning in pirouettes in the middle of the street with wide, searching eyes as she invited seemingly nobody to play the game. But this was Alvadas, and lunacy was expected. "Tag! We can't play until you tag!"
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"For want of a nail, the shoe was lost
For want of a shoe the horse was lost
For want of a horse the rider was lost"
Madeira's voice cracked like a teenage boys as she sang half forgotten nursery rhymes to an abandoned house in the ghost town. It had been a hot day, and the smell of crumbling wood and baking earth rose from the cracks in the floor. Syna's light was filtering through the broken windows at a slant now, and it pooled in the circles under Madeira’s eyes and in the ridges of her collarbones over the tight collar of her dress. Gods, she was tired.
"For want of a rider the battle was lost
For want of a battle the city was lost
And all for a want of a horseshoe nail."
Dimly she wondered why she didn't know any cheerier songs.
Despite her attempt to placate through inept singing and dour songs, the Vantha ghost refused to show himself. The Spiritist had checked for cold spots, sniffed for unusual scents, looked for flickering in the dark corners, and found nothing. She had been chasing the little boy most of the day in a perverse game of hide and seek, having gleaned from more cooperative ghosts that this boy was what was left of Coren Snowsong. He was ten years old, stubborn and petulant, and was showing early signs of veering into 'vengeful spirit' territory.
Madeira stood in the middle of the empty house, hands on her narrow hips and expression stressed underneath a forcibly benign smile.
"Coren? I'm done playing games. Come out. I just want to talk."
Silence.
"For want of a stone," she began again, pressing the heel of her hand against her eye, where a headache was brewing, "the mill was lost,
For want of a mill, the flour was lost
For want of flour, the bread was lost
For want of bread, the people were lost-"
Small hands sunk into Madeira's lower back from behind her, and there was a blinding, indescribable pain at having her soul touched directly by the ghost. Her eyes rolled back, her body spasmed, and the Spiritist crumpled like a broken marionette.
"You're it!"
A childish voice trailed cruel laughter out the door as Madeira rolled to her feet, flushed and gasping.
"Coren!"
She followed the voice out of the house and onto the street. A few living people were making their way through the dilapidated town, their expressions as grim as the broken houses that surrounded them. And behind dirty panes of glass, narrow alleys and shuttered gates the murdered Vantha's watched them go. Madeira let a strangled, frustrated sound crawl up from her throat. Where did he run off too?
"Tag! Tag you're it!", she called, her voice thin and high as she tried to rile the spectre.
She must have looked like quite the loon, turning in pirouettes in the middle of the street with wide, searching eyes as she invited seemingly nobody to play the game. But this was Alvadas, and lunacy was expected. "Tag! We can't play until you tag!"