Advertisement
MossMoon3

Moss Moon and the Lunar Spring, Part 16

Nov 27th, 2014
363
0
Never
Not a member of Pastebin yet? Sign Up, it unlocks many cool features!
text 8.67 KB | None | 0 0
  1. >Pain
  2. >Blinding pain
  3. >"It really is an art, you know."
  4. >You are Anon, and a knife is digging into your eye socket
  5. >You feel the blade rub the underside of your eyeball as Cutter pulls it out
  6. >"I sometimes feel that… I am alone amongst my colleagues," he's saying. "They don't take it as seriously as I."
  7. >His breath is rank as he leans in close to inspect the incision
  8. >"They do what they're told. Content to remove the wings, make cuts here and there.
  9. >"But that is all they do - they cut. They'd sooner scar an eye than rip it out."
  10. >He hums to himself as he begins rummaging through his lacquered box of tools
  11. >The same one you'd seen him use all those years ago, in the foothills of the Crystal Mountains
  12. >Blearily, you look around at your surroundings
  13. >Still in the central plaza, perhaps 60 feet distant from the great bonfire
  14. >You don't remember the melee, other than the fact that you killed a man
  15. >He didn't even say a word when you impaled him
  16. >Just grunted, and fell, taking your sword with him
  17. >After that, you were surrounded
  18. >Someone must've clubbed you on the head
  19. >And now here you were, bound to a stone as Cutter enjoyed his teatime
  20. >"An artist must constantly improve himself, dear Boy." Your captor has turned back to face you
  21. >He holds a small clay tea kettle in his hand
  22. >"Anyone can inflict pain, but it requires technique to make it last," he says.
  23. >"Slit a few nostrils and a group of foals will grow up absolutely hideous. As if they weren't ugly enough already."
  24. >You struggle against your bonds, but he simply grabs your face and holds it still
  25. >A hiss of agony escapes you as with his thumb he peels open the cut he just made
  26. >"The Asperi don't mind," Cutter says. "In fact, I think they enjoy my work."
  27. >He holds up the tea kettle
  28. >"They want the subservient to remember their place, after all," he continues. "Forever, and ever."
  29. >The spout tips forward
  30. >You scream, nearly blacking out from the pain
  31. >Steam rises from your flesh as your eye boils in your skull
  32. >Cutter pats your cheek. "Stay awake, now. It would be very rude of you to pass out."
  33. >In lieu of vomiting, you spit on him
  34. >The pat on your cheek turns to a slap
  35. >"Have you forgotten who your betters are?"
  36. "Why," you pant, "are you here?"
  37. >"I could ask the same of you, brat."
  38. >Cutter once again turns away. "You should be concerned less with the business of the Asperi, and more with the business between you and I."
  39. >He's no longer humming as he begins examining his knives
  40. >"He was a great man, you know," he says distantly. "The greatest of our time. Do you even remember?"
  41. >Father; he's speaking of Father
  42. >Great and shaggy-haired, with grinning white teeth, burning eyes, and iron fingers to hold the black blade
  43. >The black blade that now watches in silent vigil from its place thrust in the dirt nearby
  44. "He was a monster," you say. "A killer, who murdered out of nothing more than bloodlust."
  45. >"What do you think we are?" Cutter asks. "A sword was put in your hand the moment you crawled out of the whore that sired you. Killing is in your blood."
  46. >He turns, and you see his face now, red and terrible
  47. >"You call him monster. You are not fit even to call him father. How is it that he, a great warrior, slayer of a thousand men, was killed by a petulant child?"
  48. >Cutter is visibly shaking as he continues
  49. >"Because he loved you. His son. His own son, running him through with the blade he used as a boy. He gave that sword to you as a gift, Boy. A gift."
  50. >The man trails off, before letting out a strange, disturbing giggle
  51. >From behind him he draws a familiar weapon. His bony fingers dance across the metal
  52. >It catches the flickering red light of the bonfire as he holds it up
  53. >Your old sword
  54. >You'd dropped it when you ran
  55. >"I once hated this thing," he said. "But now it presents such lovely irony, don't you agree? Well. You will when I cut off your arm."
  56. >He falls silent, staring at you with unconcealed anticipation
  57. >You feel a horrible fear, but you lock eyes with him
  58. "I killed him," you say. "And if I could, I'd kill him a hundred times more, right in front of you."
  59. >For a moment he simply stands there
  60. >Then he is on you, the blade pressed to your throat, drawing a thin line of blood
  61. >His black eyes bore into you, as empty as the abyss
  62. >Immediately he backs off
  63. >"No," he says, looking away, then stamping his feet. "No, no, no, no! No! You are not going to ruin this for me. I've waited too long for this moment.
  64. >"I've seen it in my dreams, in the pale red glow of the bloodmoon. I knew that if I was patient, if I was good, I would be rewarded. And now here you are. You will watch me flay off your skin and I will make you eat it."
  65. >Before he can make good on his threat, one of his men shuffles into view from an alley
  66. >"Captain," he calls. "You have a visitor. One of ours."
  67. >Cutter's teeth are chattering, his hands twitching at his sides
  68. >To your surprise and revulsion, you watch as he opens his mouth wide, the joints of his jaw cracking
  69. >When he closes his mouth, his breathing has turned to normal
  70. >He turns gracefully on his heel, his mantle twirling
  71. >"Very well," he says. "Send him in."
  72. >"He wishes to meet you on the main street, Captain."
  73. >Cutter's shoulders jerk in an obvious tic
  74. >"Fine," he says, after a moment's hesitation. "Watch over the prisoner. If he tries to escape, do not kill him. If you do, I will cut off your limbs and turn you into a puppet."
  75. >"Aye, Captain."
  76. >Without even so much as a glance back at you, Cutter marches off, leaving you
  77. >If there was one thing you could commend Father for, it was his dogged adherence to the old ways
  78. >The old traditions
  79. >One of which involved being a good host to your comrades, no matter the circumstances
  80. >As you sit there, blind in one eye, it all seems so strange and disconnected
  81. >Your childhood, your time spent alone, wandering from land to land
  82. >These past weeks, going into a wilderness you never even knew existed
  83. >Meeting Moss Moon, a bat pony, of all creatures
  84. >Talking with her, becoming her friend,
  85. >Holding her; kissing her
  86. >It seems so much like a dream
  87. >You hope she gets out of here; that she and the foals escape and go to the Hollow Shades and live happy lives
  88. >They don't deserve this
  89. >No pony deserved a life like this, under the thumb of the Asperi and people like Cutter
  90. >People like Father
  91. >The black sword juts out of the dirt, watching you
  92. >Just seeing it again - that horrible weapon - is enough to fill you with dread
  93. >You look away, thinking of Moss Moon
  94. >You can even see her now, her dull golden eyes, watching you from the dark
  95. >A smile comes to your face, the illusion soothing you, even as it vanishes
  96. >Something clatters nearby
  97. >The guard calls out: "Who's there?"
  98. >A short, tubby, graybearded man, he warily enters the plaza, hand on his sword hilt
  99. >He wanders past an alleyway, and doesn't even see the glint of the spearhead as it thrusts into the back of his neck
  100. >Doesn't even see it as he dies
  101. >It protrudes from his throat, and he lets out a wet gurgle before collapsing
  102. >His eyes bulge in a way that is almost disturbingly amusing
  103. >It makes you sick
  104. >You feel something soft brushing your cheek
  105. >"Anon, look at me…"
  106. >As your good eye focuses, you realize that you must've finally fainted from the pain
  107. >You become aware of Moss Moon standing next to you, her warm breath on your face
  108. >She's already cut you free of your bindings
  109. >"Can you walk?" she whispers, her voice firm but full of fear
  110. >She is shaking
  111. >You have to focus
  112. >Her presence gives you clarity
  113. "No," you say, swallowing. "No, he cut the tendons in my legs."
  114. >Awkwardly you lift a leg to show her, but she's already rummaging through her bag
  115. >"Here," she says, pressing a vial of glowing spring water against your lips. "Drink."
  116. >As you oblige her, she stammers on
  117. >"I waited but you didn't show, so I came to find you, I found - I found a place, a building, they're holding everypony there, everyone in town, we have to get them out -" She chokes suddenly. "Goddess, I killed him. Anon, I killed him - "
  118. >You glance down at the dead man, the spear point sticking out of his neck
  119. >Already you feel the power of the lunar water coursing through your veins
  120. >You feel jittery, your breathing rapid and hot
  121. >Boundless energy surges through your body
  122. >You stand, blinking your restored eye, and reach out to hold her, just for a moment
  123. >She shivers against you, but then she is pulling you onward, toward the alley
  124. >You stop for just a moment to pull the sword from the guard's scabbard, before disappearing into the shadows with Moss Moon, leaving the bonfire behind
  125. >Overhead, red and purple light shines through the cracks in the Stronghold's ceiling of rock
  126. >The sun is setting
  127. >And this night is only just beginning
Advertisement
Add Comment
Please, Sign In to add comment
Advertisement