(Part One)
I can still see his eyes.
Mendel’s.
When I sleep, just as I’m waking up. I see them. Those pitiful, dying eyes, begging for someone, anyone, to help him. And every time that nightmare plays, I can’t. I watch him die, both in body and in spirit, every time, almost every night.
I’ve saved hundreds, maybe thousands, of lives since then. But no matter how many breathless “thank you’s” I get, the one time I failed still haunts me.
My eyes open. It’s the dead of night. That’s fairly common. I’ve learned since the first few times not to thrash about when the nightmares rouse me, which is a good thing since my bed partner needs her beauty sleep.
Lady Kasmeer Meade; for what meaning her title holds anymore. The poor thing has been thrown to the wolves of Divinity’s Reach, metaphorically, through no fault of her own. I know that I’m here because of my own failure. Kaz didn’t do a single thing wrong, and yet she’s the one suffering for the failings of her brother. She’s the one whose world had been falling apart piece by piece, like one of the condemned buildings that spot this street.
She’s the one that had managed to quell my demons, keep the nightmares at bay.
Until tonight.
I slowly slide out of bed, careful not to stir my golden-haired goddess. My feet fall silently onto the wood floor, and I gently lift my weight from the mattress. I freeze momentarily as I hear Kasmeer snort, but settle back into a restful breathing pattern.
My eyes catch sight of a raggedy, well loved stuffed brown bear at the top of our headboard. Kaz’s most valuable possession. It really said a lot about how pure of a soul she had been, and still is. That with anything she could have chosen as the guard picked her family clean, she chose the one thing that didn’t have the most gold attached to it… but the most heart.
I gently pat the bear on its matted head. It reflected Kasmeer in so many ways, most notably that despite all the dirt its picked up, no matter how much it gets beaten down, it still has that same goofy smile that won’t ever go away.
“Watch her for me, will ya?” I whisper as if it can hear me. “I’ll be back in a moment.”
My… our… home isn’t large. I wasn’t exactly rolling in coin to begin with, and Kasmeer’s presence hasn’t made the bills easier. To spotlight the absurdity of the distribution of wealth in Tyria, I’ve made more money in the last handful of months picking through the pockets of Scarlet’s fallen armies than I had made in the first two years of my detective agency.
Where did Scarlet get all her money and resources anyway? That might be one mystery I never solve.
As a result of my meager dwelling, it’s about four steps from the bedroom door to the dining room. To the west side of the room, there’s a small island of perfectly plain and lightly polished pine that serves as a dinner table, preparation space, and border between the dining room and the kitchen.
The bottom cupboard on that island was where my alcohol reserves were kept, along with a couple bottles of wine that Kasmeer would occasionally splurge on. I kneel down and open that shelf, gazing emptily into the faces of old, forgotten friends.
I hadn’t had a drink from any of those bottles in one hundred and sixty seven days. It’s one of those details that sticks with you. For a long moment, I can almost hear those old friends calling my name, telling me that they can help me forget about Mendel’s eyes, just like they used to.
I’m so tempted… so very tempted… to forget all of it. Mendel… E… Rox… Braham… Kaz…
Then I shut the door, just like I have every time I’ve had that temptation these last one hundred and sixty seven days. Maybe failure hurts. But it’s my failure, and I won’t let myself forget it. Not even temporarily. Not anymore.
I stand up, forcing my legs to straighten even as my knees feel like they’re locking in resistance. Gods, you’d think it’d get easier to resist that call the longer I go without it… but it doesn’t. If anything, that call gets louder. I close my eyes, take two deep breaths, and shuffle to what I call my “crying corner.”
It’s the northeast corner of the dining room. From that location, I can’t see any of the windows of the house, and no one outside could see me. I’m all alone there, and it’s where I would finally let my face fall. I curl up into a ball in that corner, making myself as small as I can, hoping that I can vanish.
Truth is, the reason I could deny my “old friends” tonight was because I knew that Mendel really wasn’t what was tormenting my mind. And what is gnawing at me is something that couldn’t even be banished by an alcohol fermented straight from Lyssa’s tears.
I could remember moving forward, Mendel’s weapons in hand, my investigator’s curiosity completely overridden by the desire to prune that malignant weed, Scarlet Briar…
… then black.
(edited by chemiclord.3978)