The rain pattered against the windowpanes, blown by gusts of the high wind moaning outside the cabin. Bern was up late again, drinking his sorrows again, reminiscing about the war again. He saw the scene spread out before him like he was watching himself from a great height. His small band was in the desert, baking in the sun, their wide-brimmed hats doing little to block out the blinding light, the sand blowing in their faces. The sun comes up so violently out here, he was thinking, nothing like the soft light of home where it filters in, mottled with shadows from the high forest canopy. Home is coolness and peace and simple living. This place, this hell of a desert, it's anathema to that.
They had broken camp at dawn and were heading to scout out one of the border towns in the region, Alaeton, hotbed of nothing but somehow still vitally important to the war effort. Everything was fine until it wasn't, and the ambush came over a high dune. There was screaming, men dying, the usual things you get from a war. It was here he got the wound that still ached on nights like these, a bone deep throbbing in his right side. He was proud of the scar, proud of having lived through it, despite how much blood had soaked into the sands outside Alaeton. The whiskey helped keep the pain at bay and brought back more memories.
These were kinder, softer. These were memories of Tabethe. She had been his friend, his lover. A beautiful woman, tall for her slender frame, just a few inches shorter than he was. She kept her hair cropped close during the fighting, but he had seen photographs of her from when she was younger, free from the conflict, and it had been lovely, falling in waves down and across her shoulders, chestnut brown and shining. Her lips were not soft, nothing like anything out of a romance, with their wet, plush nonsense, but they had been perfect for kissing him, for whispering secrets in the quiet watches of the night, for smiling up at him while they made love that first night in Petran.
They were on leave and had made it to the coastal city, occupied by friendly forces. There was a bar there, The Corvid, and they served what had to be the sweetest wine either of them had ever had. The waiter called it green wine, Bern thought it more of a piss yellow, but they drank it down anyway, free from the confines of their musty tents, free from the sand that never seemed to leave their clothes, the creases of their skin. She had been in a dress, the first time he'd ever seen her out of fatigues. It fit her poorly in the chest, made for a bustier woman, but she more than filled out the hips. And he held those hips as they danced to the music in The Corvid, songs from home, from places they had never been, but had made plans to see when the war was over.
The war ended for Tabethe before they could make good on those promises. She fell some dozens of miles from him, an engagement outside of Hegen, while he recovered in a field hospital, wounded from the earlier ambush. She received a double promotion, ended up outranking him, and he had had to fight to make it to her funeral. They didn't bury their own there, not this far from home in that land of savages, but there had been a ceremony, and it was the last time Bern had known any consistent sobriety. They shipped her home in a plain pine box, one of many just like it, draped in the orange and gold of the flag.
Bern poured another whiskey and rubbed his side. It was worse tonight than it had been in some time. He blamed the rain, like he always did, and was taking a sip when there came a knocking at the door. It sounded for everything like the end of the world, a hollow sepulchral tone, like a death knell. He looked to his glass like it had an answer, then looked to the door. The knocking came again, firm, insistent, a knock that could not be ignored. He stood, a bit unsteadily, and took up his machete from its resting place by the fire. It was hot to the touch, but he gripped it tightly all the same, and made his way to the door. Flicking the latch, he opened it a crack, looking out into the dark of the night.
Standing there in the low light coming from his door was Tabethe, in violation of every natural law. Her hair was grown out, longer now than when she had died, draping her shoulders in wet, rain black rivers. She was naked, shaking in the cold, her arms crossed across her chest. Bern's heart fell into the pit of his stomach where it found some courage in the whiskey and rallied again. He opened the door wider and took in the sight of her, blue with cold, blue like death. She shouldn't be there, she should be at the cemetery in town with the other honored dead, but she was, and Bern made up his mind without thinking.
"Tabethe," he sighed, and extended his hand.
"Bern," she said, empty, so cold, and took his hand.
He brought her in to the cabin, out of the rain and wind. She was an unnatural thing. Something that shouldn't be. He debated in flashes about lopping off her head, tearing off her limbs, burning her in the fire. Those were all the things to be done to the returning dead, he'd learned that as a child, reading the kinds of stories people think good for children without ever checking up on the morals themselves. He looked to his machete. It was sharp enough, and he was powerful enough, but no. This was Tabethe. That would be no way to welcome her home.
"Come, sit by the fire, you're freezing," Bern said, leading her by the hand to his chair. He pushed her gently, but firmly, into the seat, and went to fetch a blanket from his bed. She was passive, doing as he moved her, sitting still as he lay the downy quilt over her body. Bern knelt to stoke the fire, throwing on another log, and then stood, looking around the room. "Let me get you a drink," he said, and busied himself with going to the kitchen, trying to find a clean mug. By the time he was back her hair was already drying, but her lips were still the blue of a drowned man.
"Drink," he said, handing her the mug of whiskey and hot water.
"I'm sorry, Bern, I don't drink whiskey." She sounded apologetic enough, if not still this side of emotionless.