*** So they parted badly and neither one wants to see the other. So what? That doesn't matter at all to his mother. She'll fix that right up, not that she'd dream of interfering. ~grin~
A little more about the mysterious Dahlgren. 0_o
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Book of the Merren Part 3
It was early-morning and he was tired, riding slowly up the long path from the road below up to the orphanage. He knew that his horse was beat too, but he'd taken the time to let him eat and drink on occasion. He'd wanted to go to the small store there in the town below for some things and he almost did, but then he thought of her, and decided that they could do it together.
After a word with one of the sisters, he waited in the great hall.
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Nahl'een sat in the garden watching a few of the small birds as they pecked at the seeds that she'd been given to feed them with. They chirped and chattered, flitting around as they found a seed and took it as though they were stealing something before they flew off to hide it in the crook of a tree branch or in some reeds for when the winter grew colder. The little girl smiled. She knew that they always did this with the first few seeds before they took some to eat themselves.
She liked just watching them. It was a new experience, and she'd only been allowed it lately. They'd had to wait until her language comprehension was sufficient for her to understand that she wasn't to eat them anymore. She still liked to watch them though.
Suddenly, she stopped watching. She sat up, looking straight ahead for a moment, sensing.
"AAh!" she cried in her little voice as she turned and ran off as fast as she could go. She almost collided with the nun who'd come to get her.
"Sorry," she said, and then she was gone, tearing a streak along the hall.
He heard her from far off down the hallway, but she grew louder as she ran.
"Dahl!" she cried, "Dahl, Dahl!"
He grinned at her and wondered why he'd been feeling so bad until now. He raised his hand, wanting to hold a finger to his mouth to get her to quiet down for once, but he gave it up and waited for the collision. He had no idea how she could run like that in her long dress.
She was so excited as she held onto him with her little arms, a girl with black hair and bright blue eyes, not quite six years old, and looking for all the world like nothing more than that. He looked down and saw her face against him, her eyes squeezed tightly shut as if she were drinking him in through her pores. He managed to loosen her grip only long enough to get to one knee before she flung her arms around his neck and held on so tightly that his vision was beginning to darken at the edges. He reached down and lifted her up and she settled to the change in position without even letting him go.
"Hey, Nahl'een," he said with a sigh, "I've missed you so much."
"I missed you, Dahl," she sighed herself, and then they were off after getting her coat on, almost forgetting her doll, and thanking the monks and the nuns for taking care of her once more.
"I think that we should go to the shop for some food for tonight," he smiled as he carried her out to his horse.
"Sweet?" she asked, "Nahl'een gets sweet?"
It made him laugh, "You already are sweet." But then he corrected her and said afterward, "Yes, I think so."
"Two?" she asked, knowing that she was pushing it, "One for later?"
"One for now," he said, as he lifted her onto his horse, "and one for that time far away, after dinner."
Nahl'een didn't care, she only waited for him to get on and put his arm around her. This was one of her favorite things to do in the whole world, to sit in front of him on his huge horse and ride with his arm holding her. It was one of her first memories of him, from when he'd found her to take her away, the day that he'd given her a name. Her life had never been the same since.
Her little universe was still a small thing, but right there at the center of it stood a mighty god, and his name was Dahl.
They rode down to the little shop in the town and then on to their home. A half an hour after leaving the road, since the horse was tired and they chose to walk for a while along the hidden pathway, they came to the gate. A chime rang in the distance from somewhere far off, and the gate swung open for them. Dahlgren had always wondered just where that chime was. He had no idea. It sounded as though it came from everywhere all at once, though it was never loud. They walked on, talking about anything as they made their way to the stables where he saw to his horse.
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"I want to know things," she said as she sat holding still in the bath while he washed her hair.
He smirked as he carefully wiped some of the suds from her forehead before they could reach the dark eyes that she showed like this, "You always want to know things. What is it now?"
"Why we live here?" she asked, "Nobody comes. Why we live alone?"
"You mean, why DO we live here," he said. "Not many know of this place, Nahl'een. Only a few of the monks at the temple. But they have a different faith, they just know that this is here. I have to live here, and you are my daughter now, so you live here too. And we are not really alone, are we? Shaevre is always here for you."
He got up onto his knees a little higher on the floor of the chamber so that he could reach more of her long hair, "But I don't think that it's good for a little girl to live in a place like this where it's always so quiet. That's why I take you with me whenever I can if I have to go anywhere. I always take you to the town, don't I?"