I hope folks are enjoying the story so far. Please leave comments, as criticism both positive and constructive is inherently useful. Plus, I like reading comments, so that's cool.
Again, a shout out to Avicia for their suggestions and much-needed help with editing this.
The Tattooed Woman Volume 3 - Chapter 34: Shadows of Wrath
It was near enough noon afore Ellén emerged from the trees and caught sight of the tower once again. The wreckage she had wreaked in her madness upon the landscape around that old keep was plain to see, with great gouges and scorch-marks marring the vista and marking where she had stomped and raged. Standing stones that had likely stood for a thousand years had been carelessly overturned or pulverised and lay scattered like so much rubble. While the great carcass of the undead beast she had thrown down lay sprawled upon its back, its chest ripped open, with wafts of smoke from its scorched insides still coiling about it like a fright of ghosts drawn forth from the barrows by the din.
She paused, nerves playing on her mind like talons scratching on glass, her fists clenched tightly in fear at her side, and her heart pounded wildly in her chest as she wondered what she could say to the girl, what possible explanation she could offer for being so careless with her life.
She blew a shuddering breath and swallowed,
"I near enough got her killed! She's better off without me. She's better off without me and I should just go..."
Looking back up at the tower she shuddered as a tear slid down her cheek,
"I... should go."
"'Tis a hard choice is it not?"
The voice came from just off to one side and Ellén spun with a startled cry, "Fuck!"
Adair sat on the grass with her back against a tree not ten paces away, her mother's fearful glaive grounded in the soft loam by her side and easily within reach. In her hand she idly toyed with a sprig of wild hawthorn. Her head was tilted to one side as she regarded the woman before her, and her lips were curled in the strangest of wry smiles.
With a snort she chuckled, "Such language. Do you kiss your lover with that mouth?"
The Dragon's gaze flicked to the spear and back to the gleaming eyes of the creature sitting quietly there in the shade, and a cold shiver tickled its way down her spine, "H-have you come to kill me?"
Adair sighed, "I thought about it."
Ellén sniffed and wiped her cheek, "I'm sorry..."
"I know."
"What will you tell her?"
The woman continued to braid the flowers in her hand and sniffed, "Nothing."
Ellén felt as if a knife had twisted in her gut, "But she'll think I abandoned her."
Adair lifted her gaze from the garland she was toying with, "This is what troubles you?"
"I just... wouldn't want her to think that I thought so little of her."
With lazy grace Adair uncoiled from the ground and reaching out she casually plucked her spear from the earth. Sunlight glinted off the deadly leaf-shaped blade as she hefted the Gáe Bulg and Ellén felt herself shiver as the creature regarded her cooly with those strange dark eyes,
"So like her mother's."
"I see you have a new cloak."
"A... friend gave it to me."
Adair eyed the colourful garment for a moment as she stalked forward before lifting her gaze, "Not the only creature you met this day I think."
Unable to meet her gaze the Dragon cast her eyes downwards and whispered, "No."
With a heavy sigh the dark-eyed woman shook her head, "You should go."
Ellén swallowed, "Tell her... " she sniffed, "tell her something kind."
"Oh, tell her yourself! What am I, some errand girl to be delivering witless missives between a pair of twittering lovebirds?"
"What?!"
Smiling sadly Adair pressed the garland she had made into Ellén's hand and nodded towards the tower, "Cassie will be waiting."
"But, why?"
"She likes flowers."
"No, I mean...
why
?"
Adair shrugged, "The course of true love never runs smooth they say, but run it does, headlong and recklessly without care. Who am I to stand in its way, and what good would it do to come between you?" she snorted, "Methinks Cassie would not thank me for it."
Eyeing the braided flowers Ellén wondered for a moment at how they could be blooming so in Winter. She heard herself whisper, "Thank you."
Hefting her spear, the woman had turned to go, but she paused, "Oh, be warned, you had best have a care with Cassie."
"I will! I promise, I'll be more careful in futu-"
Adair chuckled mischievously, causing Ellén to pause mid-word, for the peculiar reaction almost made this strange, fearsome woman look almost impishly child-like for a moment. She smiled, "Oh, that's not what I meant, not at all."
"What then?"
"I am not you Ellén. I was made more as a weapon, I think. I do not possess the tender nature of Dragons and I have all the healing skills of a sword. I know no enchantments or spells to ease the pain of others, so to mend Cassie's wounds I was obliged to transfer a little of my own life unto her. It was a thing I had once seen Quintus do to save an injured Dark Elf."
Adair grinned, "I think I may have poured over-generously into such a small vessel. I suspect that for a while at least Cassie's exuberance will be nigh unstoppable," she snorted, "and she will be
very
enthusiastic to see you methinks."
"Enthusiastic? I don't... oh, OH!"
She blushed.
With another wry shake of her head Adair turned to go and Ellén caught a fleeting glimpse of the lingering hurt in the woman's eyes, and her hand twitched as if she thought to reach out to her, "What will you do?"
"I think I'll just sit here a while."
Ellén nodded and looked up towards the tower across the vale, "She loves you; you know."
"Who, Cassie?"
"Your mother."
The dark-eyed woman turned back to her, her shoulders sagged, and her voice was bitter, "How would I know? I've searched the world for her since she marched off to war and left me in the care of Eber. Yet it is you and Cassie who get to share words with her, but not I, not a word for Adair! And..." her voice almost broke, "I miss her."
Risking who knows what, Ellén stepped closer and wrapping her arms around her she drew the dreadful creature close, and was shaken to feel her trembling, "She loves you Adair, I saw it. She's just frightened."
"Frightened? Her?" she snorted, "That creature wouldn't know fear if it bit her on the arse!"
"She fears you."
"Me? What strength do I possess that she should fear me Ellén?"
The Dragon sighed, "Not strength. I think she fears looking into your eyes and seeing perhaps a reflection of the hurt and betrayal she thinks she's visited on you. She's scared that she has made you hate her. I... I know that look. I've seen it before."
Adair sniffed, "For a while I probably did."
"No less than I with my own mother."
With a sigh Adair lifted her hand and gently pushed herself away from the blonde woman. Looking into Ellén's blue eyes she shook her head sadly, "What a pair we are. Me here upon the ground and you in the air and yet we might as well be twins given our troubles."
Ellén blushed, "Um, about that..."
"Huh?"
"I...
think
she was jesting, but she made a crack about how she expected me to be making an "honest woman" of Cassie."
Adair froze, staring goggle-eyed and still as stone for a moment before her lips quivered involuntarily. A moment after that the first snigger escaped, and soon thereafter gales of laughter saw the deadly woman helplessly doubled over.
Ellén protested indignantly, "It's not funny!"
In the branches of the trees the crows watched the exchange with their beady dark eyes, and if they had an opinion on such things, they kept their council to themselves.
...
Garrow found herself eyeing the guard after Hildegard left the scullery. She had already devoured her second plate and was mopping up the last of the egg with a piece of toast. The guard in turn watched her as she ate, taking in her wary posture as she sat leaning over the platter, one arm coiled almost protectively around her food as though she thought she'd have to fight to keep it.
She didn't start like a panicked doe at the noises the cook made as he worked but she still watched him as warily as a wolf nonetheless, turning her head just so to keep him in sight if he moved behind her, and he saw her eyes flick instantly to the serving girl when she entered the scullery on an errand, taking in her size and posture, instinctively looking to her hands for a weapon,
"Gods, she's almost feral."
He sniffed, immediately her eyes transfixed him, and behind her piercing gaze he could almost hear the wheels turning. Wiping her chin, she pushed away her plate and sat back, "What now?"
"We have a couple of errands to run, Master Gauge will see you this afternoon and doubtless you will be presented before Mistress Aventine at supper, but other than that, the morning is your own. I'm to stay with ye for now."
"As my jailor?"