by Agony>Misery on Mon May 18, 2009 8:25 am
Trydian, put off by the ending of the insights into his parents' psyches, sighed and pulled himself away from them. He trudged off diagonally up the dune they were resting upon, and headed to the rear of the makeshift campsite, kicking at the ground as he shuffled along it. There was a temporary relief from the extremes of the desert as it got later, sometime between blistering heat, and the freezing cold of night. The dune was much steeper on this side, and the slope took him a good distance away from the others, no longer able to hear the murmuring of his family. After sliding the majority of the slope, he collapsed backward, resting against a patch of pitiful-looking grass, sparsely sticking up from the base of the formation of sand.
His eyes drifted closed, not out of fatigue, but to drown out visual distractions while he lost himself in thought. Who knew what they would find of what remained of Xexoria. He, as did so many others, occasionally wondered if this place was worth all the war and strife that those connected it had suffered over and over again for it. At times, it could seem nothing but a forsaken patch of sand between the cliffsides on the Algerothorian border and the sea to the east. But then, when the warring stopped, a magical thing could happen. Between tyrants, and wars, and poverty...there could be short periods of peace. And the people and culture of Xexoria flourished on the shining sands. That was what it had to be, for every monster who seized power here was destined to be toppled by someone who genuinely wished to restore normalcy here, to see the people smile and prosper.
The thought was comforting, if rationalized out of his fevered delusion. And he slowly opened his eyes, which widened, then focused on a distant object. A tiny bird, a speck in the distance, moved toward them through the orange sky. A tiny thing, it was so far away it seemed to exist in a different realm entirely. Unknowingly, a smile played on his lips as he stared at the thing, awkwardly diving this way and that, somehow making it's way in zigzag toward him, cutting through the hot air. His mind cleared as he allowed it to fix on this tiny thing, but it was growing, slowly but surely. His smile disappeared as the thing grew closer, it could not have been what he had seen originally, it was much larger. A bird of prey, perhaps. Of course it was, that was much more symbolic of this place than any dove or swallow, or bird flying in from the ocean. A buzzard perhaps? A messenger of death, representative of the tragedy that so often had befallen this nation. Trydian stared away, into the dune as he remembered the lessons he had learned about the history here, and when he looked back, he jumped to his feet. In the distance, there was no bird. There was a massive, winged thing, hurtling toward him, looking injured. It was a man, and at the same time, it couldn't have been. This man flew, upon wings of ivory, wearing impossibly heavy armor for flight. He seemed to hang limp in midair, and dangle at a precarious angle as one of his wings appeared to be broken. He managed to keep himself straight as he fell more than flew, with his one wing, in Trydian's general direction.
A few more seconds, and flight was but the fevered dream of a madman, and both Trydian and the angel over the sands realized it at the same instant. With a final flap of his left wing, the man fell into a spiraling dive, aimed just to the side of the young boy staring dumbfounded into the sky. With some finality, the man tucked in his appendages as he slammed silently into the dune, but with such force as to conjure several small tornados of dust and sand out of the wall of unforgiving grit. Smoke and sparks filled Trydian's vision briefly, as well, as the impact was so fierce it had ground strips of metal away from the man's bluish tinted armor. Trydian, inexplicably acting, ran over to the mound where the man had disappeared just beneath the sand, and began digging fiercely to excavate him. With two handfuls, his hand found something hot and sticky. He held his hand up, and it was crimson. Furiously, Trydian slung bloody sand in every direction as more and more of the man became visible.
A young man, hardly older than Trydian himself lay dying in a heap. His armor was missing large pieces, and he was bleeding profusely from several places. Trydian tried to call for help, but somehow his throat could not vocalize the words his mouth was forming. He stared desperately into this stranger's eyes, compelled, and Xavier Gottheit simply shook his head, telling Trydian what he already knew. Xavier allowed his gaze to fall to the side, staring at something shiny and glistening in the blazing orange light. He reached for it for a split second, but a sound like a vacuum of air shifted his gaze. Three men, cloaked in black had appeared from a wall of black along the sands at the foot of the dune. They walked forward, laughing quietly. Each held an odd-looking sword, each coated with thick red life, undoubtedly belonging to the stranger. They each walked side by side toward Xavier, and as the tallest in the middle reached out to grab his shoulder, they were all gone.
Trydian's eyes grew wide, and he jerked his head in each direction, wildly, trying to find them. His hands found his face, pushing back his hair. Had he gone mad? His hands were no longer wet, and he slung them down to stare at them, and then the sand. The impression the stranger had left was still there, but the slivers of armor and pools and streaks of blood had disappeared. All that remained was the glistening thing, protruding from the sand. Trydian was compelled to take it, to keep it, as proof that the man whom had died here had ever existed. It was a brilliant thing, of red and gold. The finest dagger, sheathed in gold. As he drew it from it's beautiful scabbard the ornately shaped blade took his breath away. The shining silver thing was unlike any he had seen, and it seemed to shine white against the red-hued sky, as though it were blistering hot to the touch, and as he ran his fingers along it's length, it was indeed unnaturally hotter than the air around it. He would keep it, he had to, there was no one else there to have it, to keep it safe. Such a rare and beautiful thing, why shouldn't it be his? The stranger would not need it again. He could not tell the others, either, they would not believe him, and they would try to take the magnificent thing away from him. No, he had found it, and fair's fair.