• Memory • In a cage, a bird II (Graded)

49th Ashan, 710

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Pharan
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Joined: Sun Jan 20, 2019 11:41 am
Race: Avriel
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In a cage, a bird II (Graded)

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49th Ashan, 710
“No.”

It was but one word, but it carried all the youthful conviction a child of nine could muster. It was enough to give Pharan pause. In the silence of the granary, Heather stared at him with old eyes. Again, he pointed at the basket sitting in the corner. Barley had spilled from a tear at its side, pooling on wooden floorboards. Heather shook her head. “Swine,” was all she said before lifting an arm to point at a bag on top of a nearby shelf. “Chicken.”

He pointed at the basked a third time. “It’s grain,” he insisted and a part of him was sure there could be no difference in what you fed a beast that would eat their own given the chance.

The girl looked at him with an owlish expression. She pointed first at the barley and then the shelf. “Swine grain. Chicken grain.” She sniffled and nodded towards the bag again. “Chicken.”

Pharan set his eyes upon the shelf with a dour expression. Speckles of silver dust danced in the warm Ashan sun. The bag was some six feet off the ground, but it might have well have been twenty. With Heather’s help, he dragged a barrel of winter apples from its corner and towards the shelf. It was only a few feet, but he felt winded from the exercise, and shaky as he finally mounted it to angle for the bag his young taskmaster had set her sight on. Careful to not drop the feed, he braced himself against its weight.

The bag slipped his hands still.

With a loud thud, it hit the ground. Somehow, it hadn’t burst. His eyes searched for Heather, but the girl had stalked towards the door. With a curse, he picked up the bag.

Pharan followed the trail of his ginger-haired overseer through the barn and onto the path outside until the tug of his chains stopped him. Adhering to the rules of an all too familiar dance, he put down the bag and stepped back. Heather turned to drag her prize out of his reach. No child was supposed to get near him now only the length of his chain that kept him off their throats (or so he had heard parents caution their brood) but Heather rarely heeded her elders’ warnings. She didn’t fear him. Or rather, she feared him no more than she feared the dog old Merle kept behind his tavern—a scrawny beast known to bite anyone and everyone.

It wasn’t a dignifying thought.

For a moment, he watched her pour grain into a shallow bowl. Concentration furrowed her brow. She couldn’t have looked more serious had some obscure puzzle been sat before her, he thought sourly. It was only when Heather walked off, to feed the chicken roaming free on the road, he relaxed against the door frame and took a shuddering breath.

After the long cold, the pollen-laden air was mild and pleasant. Clouds, cream white and thin as feathers, drifted over a sky so blue it seemed painted over the fields in a single, vibrant wash. In the distance, villagers toiled on land only recently ploughed. So far away, they seemed small, insignificant; not at all capable of controlling his life the way they did. Pharan made motion to retreat into the barn when a caterwaul of children’s voices stopped him.

Lured by the shrieking, he took a step over the threshold just as Heather thin figure slipped past him. The band of children that had followed at her heel, jeering and razzing and calling her names, slowed. Pharan spread his wings. A year in chains had worn him more than only physically but the span of his wings, wider than some of the village’s sheds, gave sudden substance to his haggard figure. The pack stopped in its tracks.

All but one.

A pudgy boy of ten, propelled forward by its companion’s cautious cheers, continued to march on. He had almost reached the door when Heather was suddenly upon him, shoving against him and pushing him into the mud.

The boy cried in surprised, then just cried. The gathered crowd stared at him, startled. Another, older, voice broke the spreading silence.

“What’s with the ruckus?”

Everyone froze. A man, raw-boned and pock-faced, staggered around the corner. Sweat gleamed on his balding head and in one hand he carried a thin crook cut from a hazel rod. The children gave him but one look and ran. A girl, younger than Heather, grabbed her crying companion by the back of his shirt and hauled him to his feet. In the next trill, they were gone, too. The shepherd’s gaze set on Pharan and Heather.

In an instant, the two of them shifted backward. Heather came to stand to the left of the door, Pharan to the right. His wings, once more folded behind him, touched rough, weathered wood. The man looked between them. Neither of them met his eyes. His attention shifted to Pharan. The stink of bad teeth and sour ale swapped over the Avriel as the old man stepped close. The shepherd slurred something unintelligible. His accusing gesture, towards the path where the boy had fallen, was less of a mystery.

“That wasn’t me, you bedraggled fool.”

Pharan had spoken in Lorien, his tone quiet but sharp. The shepherd knocked him across the head with his crook. Spit hit his chest, as the old man began to shout at him. Pharan understood less than half of it. Something about being a burden. Something about Athart. When the man motioned at his hands Pharan lifted them hesitantly to receive his three, four chastising blows with the rod. The shepherd was close enough for Pharan to have grabbed him at his thin throat. He would have been no match. The man’s hands were gnarled with age and weak and there was too much skin for his bent form. But Pharan knew there were people able to hit harder than the old drunkard and would. It was fear more than self-discipline that stilled his hand.

The shepherd turned to Heather. “You—stay away from him. And you—“, he looked towards Pharan again, “—you, put that way.” He waved towards the bag of corn sitting forgotten on the path. He pulled away, reeling, down the path and towards the tavern.

Pharan and Heather exchanged a glance behind his back.
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Pharan
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Re: In a cage, a bird II

P
haran touched his lips. “What did he said?”

The heat of midtrial had come and gone, and Pharan was sitting behind the barn, cracking last arc’s nuts into a small, osier basket. Heather was crouching some feet away in the shadow of a birch wood tree, with her own nuts and her own basket.

“You work too little.” With a skilled twist of her dull blade, she pried open the shell of a walnut and scrapped out the flesh. She patted her stomach. “And eat too much.”

Pharan scowled but said nothing. He didn’t eat more than he had been allotted for they wouldn’t give him more even when he asked. And what he was given was mostly hard bread and cheese and thin soups too heavy on the grain and too lean on the meat.

“He also said you don’t like work.” She nudged her basket with the tip of her blade, then pointed it south-west. “And your family doesn’t want you back because of it.”

The walnut burst at its seams with a dry snap. Shivers of shell and pieces of kernel came off where his sharp talons had pierced them. Pharan could sense Heather’s eyes on him, the tension of her body. She was ready to get up and run like the hare from the fox, but when he relaxed so did she.

“What he said? Else?”, he inquired, touching his lips the way they had done when first learning each other’s tongue and the way they still did to avoid confusion.

Heather merely shrugged.

For a while, they worked in silence. Most days they worked in some proximity of each other, whenever they had been given similar tasks or she picked a spot to work close to the barn out of her own accord. He understood, from listening to the townsfolk’s gossip and the prattling of their children, that her mother had died some arcs previous and a father had never been found. A local family had taken her in and most villagers threatened her kindly even if their spawn not always did. Like him, she was something of an outsider.

“He said he will sell you to the woman now,” Heather said without looking up but lifted a hand to bite into thin air as if testing the quality of a coin given to her. She pointed to the tavern, its backyard visible through the undergrowth.

Pharan pursed his lips.

The woman.

She had appeared some trials previous, alone, with not even a donkey to carry her belongings. Heather had called her an Eídisi, but whatever that meant, the girl had been unable to tell. He had seen her two or three times since, coming from or going to the tavern. Each time, she had spotted him first. Each time she had turned away last.

“That’s… absurd,” he said. He wasn’t certain he had picked the right word and Heather’s concentrated expression gave no indication whenever he had or not.

She made no reply.
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Pharan
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Re: In a cage, a bird II

T
he woman—he had learned by the way of gossip that she was a scholar of sorts, visiting all the way from Viden—came to the barn on the third night after his conversation with Heather. She didn’t introduce herself. She did not talk, not even to the old shepherd who lingered behind her with a sullen expression. She had appeared without warning, only to stand silent in the half open gate; watching. He found himself watch her in turn. She was tall for a woman with a lean, angular build and a hawk’s eyes. Her skin was the color of dark turquoises and her hair only a shade darker than that. To Pharan, she didn’t look like a scholar. An adventurer maybe. Or a hunter. But not someone who busied themselves with books or libraries.

She did nothing to persuade him otherwise.

For some time, they observed each other. He knew she had come to see him, and although there was no reason, he found himself skeptical of her interest and distrustful of her motives. To his surprise, her quiet scrutiny made his face flush with heat. Suddenly, he was aware of his dirty clothes, his surroundings. His lair. Over the last seasons, his domicile had changed little. There were some furs now and some blankets; a nod to colder weathers, and he had been given another tunic and trousers at a time when people had still hoped to peddle him off to Athart. He had received a bedroll and a few, small amenities at the same time. For all that, his home still looked like inhabited by an uncouth, uncultured beast.

Feeling her gaze on him, he lifted his chin to meet her eyes with as much indifference as he could muster. He felt a wave of satisfaction wash over him when she turned a moment later, still without having spoken a word.

Pharan remained standing beside his box, enjoying his victory until a soft rustling behind him drew his attention. He turned only to find Heather peer through the backdoor of the barn. He wondered how long she had been standing there. He straightened.

“What?”, he inquired more sharply than he had intended. “Is late. Go sleep.”

He needed time for himself.

Heather didn’t move. She kept looking at him from the half-opened door until he made his way over to her. Without a word, she reached out to drop something in his palm. A goose-egg. Pale cream colored and still a little warm. She eyed him.

Before he could make a reply, the sound of footsteps rose behind her. He saw Heather turn away and withdrew from the open door.

“You shouldn’t be out so late”, a boy’s voice cut through the silence. “And not be here at all.”

There was a moment of silence.

“Did you hear it?” The boy’s voice sounded more distant when he continued. “Shed managed to sell your pet friend. The blue woman will give him enough nel to buy twenty sheep or more. Molly said he was so happy to fill his barn once more he had tears in the eyes.”

In the dark outside, Heather made a short reply Pharan didn’t understand.

The children’s footsteps creased in the distance.

In the half-dark of the barn, Pharan felt a sudden cold settle in his stomach.
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Aegis
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Re: In a cage, a bird II

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Thread Review
Oooo this was fun. Seeing the mentality of a slave that knows, but hates, his place in life, as well as still worrying about his future as such. Well done.

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Pharan
  • Skill Points - 10
  • Renown - 0
  • Skill Knowledges
    1. Linguistics: Common
    2. Linguistics: Common: Common words and phrases
    3. Strength: Don’t lift with your arms/wrist only
    4. Intimidation: Using your wings to appear larger
    5. Endurance: Surviving on food with too little meat (for Avriel)
    6. Endurance: Withering outdoor life in a barn
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Player 2
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