Ymiden 60th, Arc 716
Out of the night that covers me,
Black as the pit, from pole to pole,
I thank whatever Gods may be,
For my unconquerable soul.
In the fell clutch of circumstance,
I have not winced, nor cried aloud.
Beneath the bludgeoning of chance,
My head is bloody, but unbowed.
Beyond this place of wrath and tears,
Looms but the horror of the shade.
And yet, the passing of the years,
Finds, and shall find me, unafraid.
It matters not how straight the gait,
How charged with punishment the scroll.
I am the master of my fate,
I am the captain of my soul.
Faith was in the clutches of a dream that was not quite a Nightmare but which was uncomfortable and unclear. She had been having tea with Mrs Witherspiddle, a one-eyed doll who had told Faith that her hat was not to standard and so she could not enter the cage. Faith didn't mind, because the cage had this enormous three-headed lion in it which had been chewing on Jamal. She didn't think that Jamal was going to like that, really, but Faith couldn't really do anything about it. As the lion chewed on him, Faith watched almost dispassionately. He shouted and he screamed, but Faith couldn't hear him. That was alright, though, she considered, because if she'd been able to hear his shouts then it would have really disturbed the ice cream. The ice cream was sleeping just over there, where the bodies were usually kept and if Jamal shouted too loudly then it would melt. And somehow that all made sense.
It wouldn't have made sense, she was sure, if there was any colour in this world. But as Mrs Witherspiddle slipped away and Faith's tea party was ruined, she realised that the world was entirely black and white. There was no sound and there was no colour. What exactly was going on, she wondered. It was not like she understood any of it and in the dream the slave girl who slept on the floor of the undertaker's shop mumbled and let out a low groan of pain and confusion.
Because the lack of colour hurt her ears and the lack of sound made her eyes bleed.
But as the tea party with Mrs Witherspiddle faded into the black and white, Faith realised that she was somewhere that she knew. Athart. That place where she was born, where she was trained. Where she had been broken and taught her place. But this was not the Athart that she knew. This was not the stark and clean and clinical place where she had wept and bled and had all the fight taken from her. This place was beautiful. Truly beautiful.
And there, there was a woman who was heavy with child. And a man who stood by his wife, holding on to her arm. There were healers and ... She looked around and wondered where her owners were. Because this life that she was watching, these people that she saw made no sense. It was all too rich, too decadent. Too...
where were her owners?
where was Jamal?
where, come to that, was Mrs Witherspiddle?
Invictus
Out of the night that covers me,
Black as the pit, from pole to pole,
I thank whatever Gods may be,
For my unconquerable soul.
In the fell clutch of circumstance,
I have not winced, nor cried aloud.
Beneath the bludgeoning of chance,
My head is bloody, but unbowed.
Beyond this place of wrath and tears,
Looms but the horror of the shade.
And yet, the passing of the years,
Finds, and shall find me, unafraid.
It matters not how straight the gait,
How charged with punishment the scroll.
I am the master of my fate,
I am the captain of my soul.
Faith was in the clutches of a dream that was not quite a Nightmare but which was uncomfortable and unclear. She had been having tea with Mrs Witherspiddle, a one-eyed doll who had told Faith that her hat was not to standard and so she could not enter the cage. Faith didn't mind, because the cage had this enormous three-headed lion in it which had been chewing on Jamal. She didn't think that Jamal was going to like that, really, but Faith couldn't really do anything about it. As the lion chewed on him, Faith watched almost dispassionately. He shouted and he screamed, but Faith couldn't hear him. That was alright, though, she considered, because if she'd been able to hear his shouts then it would have really disturbed the ice cream. The ice cream was sleeping just over there, where the bodies were usually kept and if Jamal shouted too loudly then it would melt. And somehow that all made sense.
It wouldn't have made sense, she was sure, if there was any colour in this world. But as Mrs Witherspiddle slipped away and Faith's tea party was ruined, she realised that the world was entirely black and white. There was no sound and there was no colour. What exactly was going on, she wondered. It was not like she understood any of it and in the dream the slave girl who slept on the floor of the undertaker's shop mumbled and let out a low groan of pain and confusion.
Because the lack of colour hurt her ears and the lack of sound made her eyes bleed.
But as the tea party with Mrs Witherspiddle faded into the black and white, Faith realised that she was somewhere that she knew. Athart. That place where she was born, where she was trained. Where she had been broken and taught her place. But this was not the Athart that she knew. This was not the stark and clean and clinical place where she had wept and bled and had all the fight taken from her. This place was beautiful. Truly beautiful.
And there, there was a woman who was heavy with child. And a man who stood by his wife, holding on to her arm. There were healers and ... She looked around and wondered where her owners were. Because this life that she was watching, these people that she saw made no sense. It was all too rich, too decadent. Too...
where were her owners?
where was Jamal?
where, come to that, was Mrs Witherspiddle?
And what was her place here?
What was she doing?
And who stole the colour and the sound? If she could get those back then maybe her bleeding would stop...
What was she doing?
And who stole the colour and the sound? If she could get those back then maybe her bleeding would stop...