by Paroxysm on Mon Jul 09, 2012 12:18 am
Like Igraine, Pendaran, too, had paid little attention to the ceremony. The Unseelie king's mind was a working of gears and cogs, of stratagem and cunning, and just--no, especially because his largest roadblock was now being dealt with, Pendaran needed to plan his next couple of steps very carefully indeed. There would be much . . . debate over the ramifications of the veil being lifted and the Queen of Ulster's participation in the event, as well.
Bringing himself out of his thoughts in time to catch the wedding’s orator--an odd, black furred creature even the Unseelie king could not recognize offhand--beckon for his part in the ceremony, Pendaran smiled and, without missing a beat, began to speak his lines, though his eyes still held that far-away look.
Despite his love for theatrics, Pendaran did not waste time on monologue or fluff; he had chosen quaint and traditional words for his vows, but he did find the time for a small verbal flourish at the end which won him a few chuckles from the crowd. Once Pendaran finished speaking, the orator nodded and moved to close the ceremony with practiced efficiency.
In another part of the stronghold, not too far from where an Unseelie king and his Seelie bride were being wed, a circle of witches convened, garbed in only shadowy cloaks and long platinum hair. Both the southern and northernmost witch held an ornate chest, lid up, lined with dark velvet, and containing two fetishes each. The southern witch, a skinny, long haired thing with a crooked grind removed a lock of golden hair from her chest and, in that same instant, the northern witch did the same, though the lock of hair she had removed was black, a ghostly chill emanating from it. Ceremoniously, the hair was passed around the circle for two full rotations and the witches had begun to chant.
The combined singing voice of the circle as surprisingly pleasant, if seldom used, and as the locks of hair finished their second rotation, they were passed a half turn more so that the southern witch and northern witch held the other’s bundle. The two witches stepped forward, toward a blue burning brazier set at the center of their circle, and as they did, the singing increased in fervor, the witches’ zeal coalescing into a physical, foggy force of will and magic.
Both locks of hair were cast into the brazier, its blue flame, now lined with silver, flared up and then died down as the temperature in the room plummeted and drew a collection of gasps from the circle.
The ritual was to be repeated once more, but in place of locks of hair, the two witches had removed samples of blood from the chest instead. The southern witch held blood that was once scarlet red, though now stained the color of rust, as a human’s blood was want to do, and it had been smeared on a square of white silk, cloth that had been run down the surface of a dagger that had pierced a queen’s flesh. The northern witch held a much more curious specimen: it was a pale blue, almost light purple, and it was but a bead, a pinprick’s worth of blood, and it had been captured in a frozen droplet of water.
Like before, the witches chanted, they passed the powerful charms around the circle, and then the two leaders of the coven stepped forward, still singing and chanting, and they cast the items to the flame, to burn together and mix with the ash at the bottom of the brazier.
Nothing happened for one, two, and three seconds and then the blue flame blinked out and all at once, the witches began to scream and rip ribbons from their flesh, to claw at their eyes and mouth. Where their blood did not boil in their veins, it froze, and where it did neither, it seeped out in putrid black ooze that stunk of ozone and decay. The witches agonized and suffered for only a short while, but in their minds, it was an eternity, eons, and all wished for it, to die and be free of their torment. With their passing, the flame was reignited, white and pure as snow, but as hot as a small son; elsewhere, a wedding was moments from closing and its groom, the Unseelie king, Pendaran, was smiling.
In his moment of victory, it was not scheming on his mind, but, instead, curiosity as to what Mab and Kahlan would think when they felt the veil shatter; or how long it would take them to pay him and his new bride a visit, or to at least send a messenger.
FATAL KERNEL ERROR_
Mind link to COMP disconnected_