56th of Ash, Year 4622
Time always found its way. Even as he stood in a pensive silence, the wind gracing his cheek as the man stared out into the hollow clearing, he knew that time was weaving its way into every little thing.
"I'm dying, Anna," the specter whispered, its face adolescent face clammy and broken, macerated by the pus that bulged from all of the many strange ulcers that lined its features. Necrotic, diseased, or just worn... it did not matter. It was suffering, that entity, even though it was dead. Taelian wanted to reach out and remind it that it could leave, that it didn't need to suffer any more... but he was wrong. Were not all places above, inverted or below this one a prison?
"Henry, you aren't. Come home, Henry," the young girl pleaded, standing at a distance with her arms so... tense, ready to reach out. Henry shook his head; he refused, and he ran through the forest, and he fell into the sharpest and most efficient ditch... and Anna joined him. Maybe she didn't know why then, in that last moment, but she did. She followed after the boy, and in some maligned state of empathy she amalgamated his tomb with her own.
Taelian remembered why this forest was on the tip of his tongue, just before... this Forest Ward. He had been here. It was where he learned how to look through into the Dead Realm, chasing after his first ghosts. Anna and Henry were here back then, too, only they were so much clearer... more vibrant, and emotional. Now, they faded. It was incredible that they'd lasted long enough for him to see them again, but they didn't have long. They wouldn't go to any sort of afterlife, now. Once their Miasma depleted in full, they would be ashes in the spectral wind.
If he had the heart to pray, he would. He would look upon Malek's effigy and he would ask him how he always managed to fail in deciding who deserved to die, and to live. It wasn't so simple as that: the world operated on clearly defined boundaries, but sometimes he felt that way. Sometimes he asked himself questions -- he asked why the Adac didn't do more to make their world a more prosperous one. Taelian knew now that the reasons mortals lived was so that they could plant millions of souls like seeds, only to consume them as they matured at the end-of-life into fruits. As cruel as it was, it made sense, and it explained so many things . . . but then, why didn't they let them live longer, even if only to make them ripen more? Why did Malek allow for, and even create the sort of pestilence that inadvertently claimed Henry's life?
Taelian didn't want that life for them. Jaxon and Latham wouldn't be Draedan like him, not unless Venadak wanted them to be. No one knew until they were chosen, and until then they were mortal like anyone else. It all felt so arbitrary. Why was he even alive? He'd abandoned the revolution. If that was what he'd been born to aide, he failed. Another Draedan could have been made who would have matured into a loyal asset to the Ebon Knights, but he didn't. He stood here, bare with his forearm pressed against some pine, eclipsed by the fantasy of a love that felt almost too surreal, while his old comrades died in the rotten pools of sundered marsh, begging to live as they were eaten whole... even their bones.
Was it alright to live in spite of that—in spite of them? Was it okay for him to marry, to build a family, to find love? They couldn't have anything. The only thing his old brethren could hope for was to die with dignity.
"I can't do this... I can't do this... I can't..." Taelian repeated those words over and over again, shaking his head with a gloss forming across his eyes. "I need to save them... I need to go home."
He stopped himself, rubbing his eyes and nose before covering his face, a palm obscuring everything above the mid-bridge of his nose. "No... you'll be alright," the man reassured himself. "Keep going. Keep going, Taelian... keep going."
The man sighed, bent down, and got what he was here to get: a knife he'd left on the forest floor years ago, still in its sheath. He nearly slit his throat back then, and left the knife as a reminder that he chose to live. Now? It was nothing more than a tool.
Returning to their camp an hour later, the man flung the corpse of a deer towards a campfire they'd lit, the creature thudding against the dirt and bark covered ground beside it. Taelian grunted, immediately kneeling to begin skinning it with that same knife. They hadn't had truly proper meals in a while, and it was starting to ache in him.
"I want to try making a harness," he muttered. "I was thinking... we can fly home, once we're branded and have made the Arlaed pact. You can ride my back as I fly. Does that sound alright?"