Caspian X (
the_seafarer) wrote2022-01-10 06:08 pm
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[au] an early snow
It's only mid-autumn, as the Bar-year reckons, but one morning Caspian wakes early to find that the light coming through his window has that particular muted quality to it that only comes from sifting through clouds and a veil of snow.
And snow it is indeed, when he comes outside: it crunches pleasantly beneath his boots as his breath freezes in the air and his cheeks turn pink with the cold. Snow; and still it falls, silent and light.
He heads to the stables with the intention of finishing his chores quickly so he can let the horses out to frolic in it, whistling as he goes.
And snow it is indeed, when he comes outside: it crunches pleasantly beneath his boots as his breath freezes in the air and his cheeks turn pink with the cold. Snow; and still it falls, silent and light.
He heads to the stables with the intention of finishing his chores quickly so he can let the horses out to frolic in it, whistling as he goes.
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Susan squeezes his hand and then drops it to count off on her fingers as she recites, “Winter, Wide-Earth, Sowing, Mid-Summer, Full-Earth, Reaping —“
Oh, and there’s that slight shiver again; she can’t seem to help it, but continues,
“—and Year’s End, each with its own Fair Day, too.”
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"Are you cold, Su?"
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“Nay, I’m not cold. It were only the thought. It’s harder of late, because of the season, that’s all - but I’m fine,” she assures him.
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"Why's that?"
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This time the shiver is more like a shudder, although she tries hard to hide it now.
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"Whatever it is, we needn't talk about it now, if it distresses you."
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“Say sorry, Caspian. I didn’t mean to upset thee. We needn’t speak of it, if thee’d wish it so. It’s such a pretty day.”
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He knows and knows well that life isn't always the happiness he wishes for her, and he knows too that she's witnessed and felt tragedy and heartbreak, that she was taken from her world too young, hardly having lived at all.
But it doesn't stop him wishing. "It is a pretty day. But whenever you're ready, Su, pretty day or no, I'll listen. If you like."
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Would it be easier? For him to hear it now, like a quick, clean cut, rather than draw it out to another time and leave him wondering?
Susan thinks of her father, and what he’d advise her, and gathers her courage in both hands.
“Mayhap we could find somewhere to sit,” she suggests. “By the water?”
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He presses a kiss to her hair and loosens his embrace to let her go, though he stays close. "There's a likely spot, over there in the sunlight."
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Susan squeezes his hand and smiles at him, as reassuringly as she can.
“Do’ee have harvest festivals in Narnia?”
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(life to yer crop)
“Celebrations and dancing and all sorts of things, say true.”
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The way he watches her, it's clear he expects the footing to drop out from beneath him at any moment. "Roasted apples and nuts and the like. It was a busy time but a merry one."
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"Aye, it were merry, I wot. It were in Mejis too, once, save for the rumors and traditions handed down from older times. Darker times."
(the ways of the old ones were the ways of death)
She draws a careful breath and lets it out, then finishes, as gently as she can,
"And save for nearly a year ago now, when the witch Rhea, Rhea of the Coos, led the people of Hambry to burn me on the Reap-Night bonfire."
(charyou tree)
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But what is there to say? Nothing. It clogs in his chest and his throat as though someone has ripped his voice from him.
(She feels so real. She feels so alive and warm, her hand gentle at his cheek, her eyes on his. But in the end, they are both ghosts, are they not? Ghosts who only remember what it was to live and breathe and age and hurt. And die.)
And the look in her eyes – the very knowledge that she is, in this moment, concerned for him takes his breath utterly away. Tenderly, he lifts his hand to take hers from his cheek, to press her fingers between his palms. "I'm so sorry, Su," he says, low. "Dear one, I am so sorry."
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“And it didn’t - there weren’t any pain,” Susan promises him. “If that helps thee at all.”
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There must have been pain. If not the kind she means, then the pain of betrayal and fear. And that she wishes to soothe him – ! "Not terribly much," he admits, and reaches with his free hand to brush his thumb over her cheek.
"But I hope that it helped you."
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“That’s why they’re so protective,” she murmurs, after a moment. “‘Bert and Alain especially. They thought I were safe, where they left me. And they couldn’t - when it happened - they couldn’t get there, not in time, ye ken.”
“And it’s why- the season, I mean. It’s only the memory, sometimes. I kennit it’s not the same, but sometimes…”
Susan shrugs. “They’re building a bonfire-stack already, down near the ocean beach, someone is. I don’t - I don’t go near.”
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How could he not? He, himself, had been so protective of Lucy during their voyage on the Dawn Treader. He leans his head to nudge his forehead against hers.
"How can I help?" he asks, softly. "Would that I could simply take you away until the season was over, but I've no idea how. Or where."
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“But there’s naught to be done, I wot. Just be patient with me? I’ll try not to let it - to let it interfere with things.”
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"Oh, please don't, Su. You've nothing – I couldn't care less about what it might interfere with. How could you be expected to act as though this were any other time of year? And not a year yet since? Dearest, please. Whatever you feel – whatever you need – it's all right, Su. I swear it. And I'll do all that I can, day or night."
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She sounds a little uncertain about that, but shakes her head and continues, “And I’d not - I weren’t trying to hide it from thee, Caspian, or not really. I only - I knew it’d hurt thee to hear it.”
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He tugs her braid over her shoulder and runs his hand lightly along it. "But I am glad you felt you could tell me."
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