| So i had a fortune cookie today. It read:
"Do something unusual tomorrow".
Now lets think about this. I make a habit of doing the unexpected (read unusual). So by doing something unusual, does that mean I have to be normal tomorrow? And if i am normal tomorrow, does that mean i have to be unusual and unexpected? And since i make a habit of doing the unexpected, does that mean i have to be normal?
What is normal? What is tommorow? What is John Kerry's hair? What is expected?
My head hurts now.
*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*
Cassandra awoke with a start to the musical sound of steel
being freed from a scabbard. Her blue eyes watered from the cold, and she
shifted softly in her fur rug, trying not to disturb Alys, her personal
bodyguard. She stuck her head out of the blue flannel tent’s flap, and shivered
as the winter wind brushed her black hair. Trake and Riser, two of her
bodyguards, stood at angles to each other, with their backs to Cassandra. Their
snow wolf pelt cloaks fluttered lightly in the wind, and their heavy armor gleamed
dangerously. The two men’s eyes scanned the sparse woods that surrounded their
clearing. They held their swords loosely, almost casually, but Cassandra knew
them well enough to know that their apparent ease with weapons was due to their
experience, not their relaxed nature. The other blue tent’s flap opened as
Bruce stuck his out. The Captain of her bodyguard’s gray eyes scanned the snowy
clearing, he reminded Cassandra of an old he-wolf, wary, cautious, and
completely untamable. The other flap peeled open as his wife, Celeste joined
her husband. The sorceress’ eyes too scanned the woods with intensity.
Cassandra saw the womans’ mouth move slightly as she mumbled something. Was it
a warning to Bruce, or a spell? Nervousness spread to Cassandra, it seeped into
her like the frigid cold.
She heard and sensed nothing, but she knew her senses were
woefully lacking when compared to the men and women who kept her alive. She
felt Alys stir too, and a moment later her closest bodyguard appeared alongside
Cassandra, her hazel eyes peering intently about for the slightest movement.
Cassandra forced herself to evaluate the scene before her. There was something
wrong, but what was it? She chewed on her under lip as she pondered the
problem. The clearing lay silent and quiet as the early morning sun suffused it
with an eerie light. That’s it! She
gasped. There was no sound at all, except for the faint nickering of their
horses, and the heavy breathing of Trake and Riser. No birds sang, no animals
moved. The clearing was as silent as death. The thought chilled her even more
than the cold.
Bruce grunted softly, and crawled out from the low tent, He
wore only skin tight leather breaches, and Cassandra averted her eyes out of
respect. Not for a sense of decency, at least not in that he was not fully
clothed, but in respect for the markings his body bore. The scars that crossed
his chest and back were scars earned in defense of her life and wellbeing. On
his right shoulder, he bore a black tattoo in the shape of a crown. Six stars
sat above the crown, one for each of her bodyguards and the crown for her. The
star all the way on the right had had a golden outline added to it, for now
there were only five. On his right hand,
the hand that was wrapped firmly around his naked sword, he wore a thick silver
ring inset with a large emerald. It marked him as bodyguard to the Princess –
Heir, and executor of her will. All five of her bodyguards carried one.
She watched as Bruce walked towards the other two men, his
skin puckering from the brutal cold. As painful as it must have been for him,
the stoic Captain made no expression of discomfort. He stopped near Trake, and continued to scan
the forest with his men.
“Alys.” He said calmly.
“Captain?” She answered softly.
“You know your duty.”
“Yes sir.” She said tensely. She withdrew into the tent, and
Cassandra could feel her moving about, presumably preparing for something. She
knew better than to speak when her bodyguards were tensed, waiting for the
tiniest sound. Then they all heard it. A horse neighed from deep within the
trees. Immediately, the men set themselves into stances, their swords up and
ready, their eyes more alert than ever.
Steam gathered at the ends of their faces as their breath
misted in the cold. Cassandra’s head whipped around at movement from the corner
of her eye. Her heart raced, could it be attackers? Perhaps a rebel Lord, or
barbarians? A moment later she almost laughed at herself for her foolishness,
as Celeste moved from her tent. She kept a buffalo hide wrapped around her, for
warmth and modesty. Her golden hair fluttered behind her like a starry trail,
and her restless, brown eyes moved just as warily as her husband’s. In her left
hand she grasped a thin staff, more like a rod, which whipped to and fro as she
moved her hand compulsively.
Then there was a thud, and another, and then many. A dozen horses
and riders broke into the clearing, and men shouted. The men carried no
standards, no coat of arms, but their well polished armor and well kept horses
made them obviously professional. Lances lowered, and the men began to trot
forward, seemingly almost smug in their superior numbers. Celeste snarled
something in a language Cassandra could not comprehend, and the air stiffened
as a sound to rival thunder for power, roared through the clearing. Cassandra
closed her eyes against the sudden flurry of grit, and snow. When she dared to
look again, she wished she hadn’t. Several men and horses lay in twisted poses
of death, their flesh burned to a crisp. The wind sent the acrid scent of
burning flesh towards Cassandra, and she recoiled in distaste.
The remaining men kicked their horses into a charge, heading
right into their encampment. Cassandra watched as Bruce raised his sword
towards the leading rider. The man lowered his lance to gut him, but the
captain slipped under its reach, and to the other side of the horse, lashing
out as he went. There was a horrendous scream as the horse collapsed, pinning
its rider to the ground.
“Highness, you must come with me.” Alys’ voice whispered in
her ear.
“Now?” Whispered Cassandra. “And leave them to die?”
Alys laughed softly. “It is their last gift to you. Would
you shun it?”
Cassandra glanced back out of the tent again. More riders
were down, as the three swordsmen hacked into the riders. Celeste watched
impassively, then turned her steely gaze on the two of them.
“No.” She whispered.
“Get her out of here!” She snapped to Alys. Cassandra knew
that command was more to her than to her bodyguard. Alys grabbed her hand, and
dragged her back inside their cramped tent. With a quick slash of her knife,
the bodyguard opened the back of the tent, and shoved Cassandra out. The two of
them dashed out of the forest, Cassandra wept as she went, for her family lay
dieing behind her. |