Caspian X (
the_seafarer) wrote2023-02-11 10:26 pm
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[au] Narnia and the North
There's a chill bite to the air, these days. The horses have been growing out their winter coats, and they look shaggy and plump as Caspian turns them out into the paddocks. Behind the stables, in the makeshift woodshop he'd cobbled together, the sleigh from his drawings is starting to come together.
He hopes he'll have it finished by Christmas. With a little luck, and maybe some assistance, he thinks it should be possible. The tack, he's largely left up to Susan's devices, though he'd commission Gimli the dwarf for the various buckles and other metal pieces they'll need.
Once the horses are turned out, he gets to his other morning chores with a will, whistling cheerfully as he does. The stable stays strangely quiet around him. It takes him the better part of an hour to realize the strangeness is because he's become accustomed to Susan's cheerful presence working alongside him, talking or humming or simply working in companionable silence.
Caspian pauses in his task – refilling the grain chest – and looks around. Susan's nowhere to be seen, and when he later wanders through the stables, checking each stall and outside, he can't find her there, either.
He hopes he'll have it finished by Christmas. With a little luck, and maybe some assistance, he thinks it should be possible. The tack, he's largely left up to Susan's devices, though he'd commission Gimli the dwarf for the various buckles and other metal pieces they'll need.
Once the horses are turned out, he gets to his other morning chores with a will, whistling cheerfully as he does. The stable stays strangely quiet around him. It takes him the better part of an hour to realize the strangeness is because he's become accustomed to Susan's cheerful presence working alongside him, talking or humming or simply working in companionable silence.
Caspian pauses in his task – refilling the grain chest – and looks around. Susan's nowhere to be seen, and when he later wanders through the stables, checking each stall and outside, he can't find her there, either.
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She drops another curtsey to the birch-lady and beckons to Alain, who keeps pace at her side as they ramble along one of the garden paths.
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"Think this'll be enough like a lantern to do?"
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Even aside from Susan, he doesn't want to risk an open flame in the garden, but he's never seen anything quite like the can Cuthbert shows to him.
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"Susannah says it burns blue and contained in the can. Looks and smells different from real fire, but enough to heat a pot of coffee or boil water."
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Without the prospect of a fire, he'd resigned himself to the likelihood of a cold supper. Something warm would be nice, if they can manage it. He hefts Alain's pack and Susan's rucksack and starts making his way to the little glade.
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It takes a little while to explain, but it seems the treewife's trusting enough of them to not be concerned. Or rather, of Caspian and Susan - Cuthbert's not expecting that either he or Alain's well-known enough here for that.
All in all, it doesn't take too long to set up a comfortable campsite, with everything arranged neatly where needed and packs stowed.
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And not a moment too soon, Caspian thinks, glancing up at the sky. A veil of evening is just beginning to pull across the blue, and the sun is sinking low.
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"Looks like they've got things ready," he murmurs, and touches her on the arm to draw her to a halt. "Come with me?"
Susan blinks up at him and nods. It looks like she starts to say something, but gives it up as too much effort. Alain nods back, takes both her hands in his - gods, they're ice-cold - and rubs them a bit to warm them before he puts an arm around her and walks her back to the others.
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He gets up as Alain brings Susan over, and guides them to a blanket on the grass. "Come sit, Su," he says, as cheerily as he can. "We'll be snug as you like here."
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(don't try to sit)
Her fingers find only skin, and Susan takes a careful breath. "Aye, of course."
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He hopes they have enough to stand against it, this small circle of willing hearts, in a place of life and growth. Caspian reaches gently for her hand to guide her down to the blanket, if she'll let him.
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He trades a grim look with Cuthbert, knowing that they're both remembering Roland's screams and the cursed pink glam of the gods-damned grapefruit as he watched her burn.
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He looks up at the gunslingers, rueful. "What now?"
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"I'm here," she says, and looks up from her hands in Caspian's and past his shoulder to Cuthbert. "I'm here. It weren't like this for ye all those years, was it?"
She remembers Mal telling her about the memories of his friend David--
(dead friends haunt old soldiers)
--and she blinks back sudden weary tears, even as 'Bert tells her, "Not like this, nay."
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Something twists in Cuthbert's face at that.
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"That's not them," Alain says, steady and quiet. "They're not here, Sue. They can't reach you."
"But she is," Susan informs them. She's staring past them all, at the ash-black figure standing outside their circle.
(I curse thee with the ashes)
"The dead walk here, do'ee not ken?"
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(who ever heard of a witch that really died?)
"Begone," he demands. Behind him, behind Susan, the birch-woman's branches rustle as though a heavy wind has blown through. "I cast you out, witch."
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Pale she is still, but Susan's on her feet now, hands flat against her thighs. "Ye'll want to watch yer words, Aunt," she warns.
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(is he really as bad as that? would he really murder me?)
"And if you cannot speak courteously to this lady, then you will keep your poisonous tongue behind your teeth or lose teeth, tongue, and head, all."
Something else shifts just beyond Susan's hateful aunt – the beech tree he'd seen on his last visit. He'd thought the beech-woman asleep, like the willow, but now its branches seem to be moving against the wind. There's a soft but intent murmur in the air, like the sound of the brooke, or wind through leaves.
Awake! Awake! Danger – fire – murder – awake!
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"Cord, Cord, Cord," Cuthbert says. "For Susan's sake we'll give you one warning. Leave this place and never return, else we'll send you to Na'ar."
"It weren't yers to forgive me aught, ye murdering whore, and ye'll not keep her!" Cordelia lashes at them all. "Ye'll not hold her here, or anywhere! I cursed her with the ashes, cursed her to darkness, and I'll claim her to her rightful end once and for all. She's for the fire--"
(charyou tree)
Something flashes in her hand; something orange and bright and viciously burning.
"--and ye'll not keep her from it!"
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It's a thing he's only heard once before, on the battlefield between the Telmarine army and Old Narnia: as if a wild summer storm had broken over the entire forest. The beech-woman is well awake now, he sees – Cordelia, in her maddened fury, seems unaware of the great trunk and lashing branches coming behind her. Darkness is indeed encroaching... but it comes for Cordelia, trees shifting forward, branches reaching. Behind him, he can hear the birch-woman calling; before him, he sees the beech-woman reach to wrap her branches around Cordelia like a lover.
Caspian holds his sword at the ready, but hangs back from attacking. "You should not have brought fire into this place, evil one," he says, cold. "And the trees here are fond of your niece. No one will go into the darkness this night but you."
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