The inspiration for this novel came to me one day when I was thinking about how would one act, and what kind of decisions would one make, based on the idea that one may not live to see tomorrow. I am sure we would all make very different choices. It has been an interesting exploration to say the least.
Winter's Grasp.
Bennett's wild clan had been reborn, thus began a new age of blood and terror waged from horseback. Growing increasingly bolder and stronger the warriors ransacked habitation after habitation with ruthless abandon.
It was not long until every man had a mount of his own, and the raiding party reached its full, rabid potential. For miles about the hidden valley the sands ran red with shed blood, and settlements burned. Each successful conquest brought more wealth to the camp, supplies were replenished, more weapons added to the growing cache, and most importantly the men now had shared purpose.
Spring as always was brief, but there were some unseasonable rains keeping the grasses alive until late into the season. This was a great boon as the increasing number of horses were having a serious effect on the very marginal grazing in the valley.
Sven watched his younger brother cross the clearing to the cave, as he sat with Raissa who was tenderly brushing his long hair, his son sleeping contentedly by his feet wrapped in rabbit furs with not a care in this world. He had watched Aran evolve from a frightened youth at the war's onset to what he was now, a confident, cruel barbarian, powerful and deadly, and he wondered if this was how it had to be, or could it have been otherwise?
Had he somehow failed? Sven sighed, he was not proud of this fact, Raissa paused, her rhythmic brushing then resumed, the sun and her ministrations felt good. That was all Sven had now were simple pleasures, at thirty-six he felt like an old man, but unlike most he had what no one had, a real family.
That kept him going and filled him with pride. He took in his little son, golden haired and gray eyed just as he was, promising to teach him well, and defend him at all costs. He would work hard to make sure he was more than a mere barbarian, he would do a lot better than he had with his own little brother.
On those languid spring days that Aran was in the camp in between his murderous excursions Maya gave him much satisfaction. The tiny girl who barely came up to his great chest his constant companion, he found himself more often than not wallowing in desire. The young girl had quite taken to openly flirting with him, shamelessly so. Aran used Maya when and where ever it took his whim, multiple times daily.
He had pushed his pact with his brother to one side, and coupled with Raissa only on occasion, still with no result. Maya had now become the epicenter of his lust, and he engaged in it as a man who had no tomorrow. At night she would serve him flawlessly, then curl up against him as he drifted off to sleep by the communal fire.
This night he smiled contentedly, stretching his tanned limbs lazily like a big cat as he settled down to sleep. Putting his arm about Maya possessively shrouded in his furs. It had been a tiring past few days of hard riding and physical exertion, and he found he was of late sleeping very well if not for the strange dreams, visions that made no sense, and the sword, always the sword, the fantastic weapon he coveted but could never seem to grasp. This evening would be no exception...
*****
They were beautiful in a classical perfection, but not as the beauty in humanity was gauged. There was no frailty or imperfection here, just hard indifferent coldness. These beautiful people, if indeed they were people at all, stood and sat about a large highly polished table top in lively debate...
"Your son, your weak son! He has been well and truly sidelined and by a mere mortal! Hah! He couldn't begin to compare with Aurianne my daughter! She will be the one for sure."
"Your daughter is weak, Axtros." The tallest amongst them jeered, a simple diadem of silver adorning his blue black tresses that hung to caress the table's shining surface. His hands fine and white, not those of one who had seen any menial work in his lifetime. The black nails long and edging to points like talons.
"My lion of a son could take her any time he chose!" There were ripples of spiteful laughter from all the beautiful beings who reclined about the ebony table, their skin milky white, bodies slender, hair long and silken, eyes black, and features ageless.
"So why was it Choronzon that you should see fit to bestow a bauble of our world on that pathetic creature you sired? Is that not improper? Not that it has helped the dull witted creature at all." More malicious laughter bearing the quality of discordant music arose from those about the tabletop.
"Oh you all boast such empty claims." A lilting female voice raised above the others, beautiful and demanding. "My son will best all your misbegotten spawn." She hissed. "He is smarter than some dull witted brute with a weapon, I mean honestly what were you thinking when you bedded that awful woman?"
Again raucous laughter, long stemmed wine glasses clinked, filled with beverages of inky black, no wine of earth was being consumed here this night.
"Sheharizade?" The man, if he was a man with the diadem shot back. "Your precious son is naught but a scheming weakling like his mother, and unlike my son he has yet to prove himself. Not only that my dear..." His voice laden with velvet poison. "You cheat at the game..." There was a pregnant pause then the room erupted in a cacophony of voices and he could make out no more...
*****
Stephan and his people had not squandered the winter, nor the months of early spring, the elderly leader on this perfect day touring the newest of the fortifications.
He pushed on through his weariness, leaning heavily on his staff, fatigue had dogged him in recent months, he was trying to will it away. The words of his guide no more than a distant hum in his ears. The usually astute man heard nothing of the explanation of the newest of the fortifications, but nodded as though he had, waving the man onward to show him yet more of the same.
Stephan was unsure if he was personally ready for this war, he was aging and wished he could abdicate the position to someone younger, someone more vital to lead them. If only Renard had been here, the thought all but brought him undone, finding he had to pause for a moment, collecting his bearing and reigning in his mind.