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Taelian and Lethiril

Posted: Thu Nov 28, 2019 7:59 pm
by Taelian Edevane
Image
31st of Glade, Year 102

“Taelian,” whispered the Dratori enthusiastically as he peaked his head through the gaps of the fence. The birds, rare and gaunt as they were, chirped as they fluttered beneath the summer light. It was hot — of course it was. A midsummer day in Silfanore, in the dreg of the lower city nonetheless, mired in the pungent smells of claustrophobic city life and almost noxious humidity. But they were used to it, sweaty as they were, and they enjoyed their games and their whispers and their heroics that they both truly thought might one day come to light.

They were told not to whisper of the Dranoch - that they could never be the villains, as such stories were ones of covert revolutionary sentiment, and would have them both sent to be harvested in the Atrium of Dusk. Horror stories told by parents, but ultimately true — the most imaginative and reckless of children died young, as in their world it did not have to be a Dranoch who overheard them. Someone who wished to curry favor, perhaps—even another child harmlessly tattling to one of the guards just to see what might follow.

Good things never did, and those children often regretted their stories for the remainder of their life.

And so, their stories weren’t focused on the things changing around them, even with Courtier Dalen’s death and Aldrin’s ascent so fresh and new. They weren’t even on Sil-Elaine most of the time, but of worlds far away from the impact of the Sundering, often whispered to them by the lucky old or the most wistful of farmer’s wives.

Today’s tale was set in the Larissa, the land of golden valleys and untamed human tribes who war endlessly with the ‘civilized world’. Of course, Taelian and Lethiril—ever civilized— were the Clockwork settlers of old, still trying to rein in the primitive Koltoskan braves.

“I think I saw one,” Lethiril said, his face pressed through the fence, the side of his head lain against the side of Taelian’s. They relaxed into the wood but crouched their knees against the grass as if their blatant presence in the open, muddy field was somehow subterfuge.

“Did he have our horse?” the other asked, blinking. A Dranoch patrol walked by and eyed him as they did, though the Siltori paid them no mind. He simply lowered his eyes, curtained now by his boyish silver lashes, and after they passed his head rose like an ostrich.

“He did,” Lethiril replied.
“How many meters?”
“A lot.”
“Think he may have friends?”
“Doesn’t matter — we have guns!”
“True. Okay then, Leth, we’ll ambush him. You take sunny cliff, I take lone road. The one blocked by all the tall brown grass—is that how granny Lierril described it?”
“Think so!” the Dratori boy exclaimed.



Re: Taelian and Lethiril

Posted: Thu Nov 28, 2019 7:59 pm
by Taelian Edevane
Image

Taelian crouched, arms extended out to each side with his fingers bore out like claws, or a rake; he was like a scamp, perhaps because he was one, frequently drawing in trouble with his fantasies and his careless exploration of lower Silfanore. But children mattered a great deal to the Siltori, and so even the criminals tended to avoid him, perhaps even cocking a smile at his playful wanderings as he stepped through the grime and grit of their fallen old capital.

“Leth, can you hear me?!” he yelled, having snuck beneath the collapsed wall he deemed to resemble the tall savannah grass, ignoring the fact that his yelling defeated the purpose of his stealth in the first place. Lethiril, perched atop a building he’d climbed atop via a mostly intact stairwell, shouted back.

“I can, I can!” he gleamed.
“Do you see our horse?”
“I do!”

Lethiril was always easy. He always had a positive outcome to exclaim, whenever Taelian asked, probably because he was insecure enough not to want to feel useless. Because of that, Taelian often had to artificially embolden their story, add layers of difficulty or cut out asking Leth altogether; he would say, ‘Our horse isn’t there,’ or ‘the barbarian escaped.’

Still, even with Taelian essentially acting as the sole narrator, he was certain that Lethiril enjoyed his tales. He was always smiling so brightly, he was always so engaged; there was no way he was anything other than perfectly content. The Siltori would have liked to imagine that, at least — that he wasn’t just his friend because there was no one else. He was a Dratori, and somehow treated suspiciously for that reason. For most, that alone was enough to stray away.

And Taelian was an orphan, equally desperate, though without even parents as company. Boys like him were not often looked to by the other children, nor their parents, with a welcoming grin.

They tackled the upright pillar, already on the verge of collapse, and of course helped return its bricks to the soil in their pretend. It wasn’t ever really a barbarian of course, but at least the pillar had the decency to offer them a satisfying blow. Lethiril sounded a high-pitched neigh, replicating poorly the sounds of their animal friend. Of course, he didn’t lay on the ground and let Taelian climb on him, but they ran off towards the torches they deemed sunlight all the same.

They went back to Lethiril’s destitute hovel, barely risen above the soil with cockroaches skittering about. The blight of Sil-Elaine for their seeming inability to die, and their penchant to lurch upon food still unspoilt the moment one turned from their table. Worst was how hungry they all were; enough to eat their food still, swatting off the roaches as they tried to eat. There were just so many of them, and they flew.

Of course, Taelian wasn’t given as much to eat as Leth, as he wasn’t really their child. It was a mercy he was given anything at all — a mercy he appreciated, and he said so often, with a gleaming smile that really sung his youthful naivety. It was enough to keep him around for, another glimmer of light alongside Lethiril who seemed to make the Dratori boy glow all the more.

For the while that it lasted, it really was like a family to him, even if he got half rations. The elderly Siltori gave him their leftovers when they lost their appetite, anyway; it covered the rest.

“Do you think that Aldrin and his black marking will beat up the blood-Siltori?” Lethiril asked.
Taelian’s brows furrowed. “No way,” he replied.

Pressing his lips together, the Dratori boy spoke again. “I think he can. Eventually. He killed one of them - that tells everyone that they can die. People are already talking about it. I’ve heard… a lot, and I think that’s why the patrols have been increasing. But they’re moving further and further away from the center of the city. Some have even started looking for a way out, like in Morian. My parents are saying… it’s a good time to leave, while they’re distracted. While they go east, we can move west. Some of the old underground trains might still be working. Or we can let a Daravain hunting party take us as slaves. It would be better than this.”

“That’s crazy,” Taelian replied. “No one gets out of Sil-Elaine. We’re their… their property, Leth; my dad said every single person who’s ever tried to run away had their heads hung up on spikes. All of them, Leth. Don’t let that be you, too,” he whispered.

Stupidly, he felt his eyes welling up. Stupidly. It was embarrassing to show his feelings like this, so suddenly and in response to nothing but a thought. But the thought was worrying, and the danger was real, and—what would he do if his only friend had his head hung up high on the parapets, down in the center of the city, his failure proclaimed for all to know? It would be too much for one orphan child to ever bear.


Re: Taelian and Lethiril

Posted: Thu Nov 28, 2019 7:59 pm
by Taelian Edevane
Image

They bunked that night. Before Lethiril was born, a Siltori sage - basically an old woman con artist - told his parents he would have a twin sister, who they charmingly named Lethira. She was never born but the bed meant for her still stood high, and thankfully so for the back of young Taelian.

Throughout the night they spoke of what could be, or would be Lethiril liked to correct, once he escaped the blighted wetlands of Sil-Elaine and found that high savannah waiting for him. He spoke in plural, of what ‘they’ would do, and he didn’t mean him and his parents. He meant he and Taelian, the best of friends since forever and a start, bound together not just by loneliness but a fondness that seemed to emanate from their very souls.

Of course, his parents were the ones deciding who went and who stayed, and the more Taelian learned of their plans the more he realized he was certain not to be a part of them. They were paying smugglers gold for each head, a fair amount of farthings that they had stolen or saved across the years. Leth’s father was a thief, and a good one, but even he had spent the larger part of a decade gathering the funds for this journey out. There was no way he would wait another two years to bring a child who wasn’t even his son.

Taelian, that night, was reminded of what it was like to have that: someone willing to do anything to offer him a better life. His own father came to mind, before he passed from pox and an assortment of infections that seemed to always culminate in some tumorous growth.

It was too much to ask for that back. Or for Lethiril to stay. But he remembered, nonetheless, that long after his dear friend had fallen to the compulsions of sleep — that he lied awake, still, in tears yet again though he covered his mouth so that they did not sound. Lethiril did leave not long after that, though painfully and beautifully, his head was never draped over the town square for a crier to scream out with a vindicated roar. Perhaps that meant that he lived. The tears may have obscured it, but he hoped that he did.


Re: Taelian and Lethiril

Posted: Tue Dec 03, 2019 2:26 pm
by Nyx
Come Get Your Rewards


Experience Earned: 5/5

Magical?: No

Lore Earned:

Tactics: Planning an Assault
Tactics: Relying on Allies
Logistics: Forming a plan
Stealth: Choosing a position to hide in
Stealth: Hiding in plain sight
Storytelling: Adversity is necessary

Ills and Ailments: Nope

Loot: Nope

Reviewer Notes: Ouch, my feels. This started off so pure and took a hard-left in feels and darkness at the end. Well, no, hard-left probably isn't the right word. It felt gradual to the point it was natural, and I really loved the way you decided to characterize both of the boys. It's going to hurt having to read present threads now, no doubt. I hope Taelian gets help.