12-14-2011, 02:46 PM
That is my prayer, my final cry-I pour it out
with my own lifeblood. And you, my Tyrians,
harry with hatred all his line, his race to come:
make that offering to my ashes, send it down below.
No love between our peoples, ever, no pacts of peace!
Come rising up from my bones, you avenger still unknown,
to stalk those Trojan settlers, hunt with fire and iron,
now or in time to come, whenever the power is yours.
Shore clash with shore, sea against sea and sword
against sword-this my curse-war between all
our peoples, all their children, endless war!
-Queen Dido of Carthage
Virgil's The Aeneid, Book Four: The Tragic Queen of Carthage
A Harrowing Path
His great maw lowered with a quick drop, almost as if his jaw unhinged. Within were the vicious canines, gleaming through the filth and saliva. Outwards came his roar, raging eyes focused on their target. He lifted off to his hind legs, massive clawed paws in the air now, black fur bristling.
Lith stood still. Her body was frozen in place as if tight ropes bound her. All she could do was stare into the eyes of the bear, so petrified that she could not even take a breath. It was not that she feared to make noise and so stopped. No, her very lungs would not function. Her heart had lost the will to contract. The eyes of the bear made her body simply cease, beyond fright or terror. That death was so inevitable, it was almost as if death had already come and just left her shell.
The bear stared for only moments more. He seemed to take in her look, the blue skin, cloths and leathers of animals that adorned her body, and those fierce red eyes of her people. Lith's image reflected within his own eyes, becoming so pristine that she was there, as clear as she was in reality. Then, with only the cruel instinct of the beast, the black bear fell upon Lith and consumed her. Flesh was torn away, fat licked clean, until only the bones remained...
And then the bones were broken, cracking into shards. And the bear gorged on the sweet marrow, savage teeth snapping Lith's bones in two, his tongue and snout sucking the marrow clean out...
Lith sat up awakened, her eyes staring into into the wood and green leaf walls of the hut she slept in. She wiped the sweat from her brow, pausing the look at the moisture in her shaking hand. Her lips raised, teeth bared as she grabbed her blanket and threw it off at the wall. It landed just a foot short, softly hitting the ground.
"That dream," she mumbled in almost completely unaccented common, "It was of my vision... It refuses to stop haunting me." Lith brought her knees to her chest, wrapping arms tightly around them and resting her chin on top. "If ya think ya can deter me with your mind games spirits you are sorely mistaken. No one and nothing may stand in the path of champions. Not men an' surely not spirits who have lost their freedom." With that she stood up and brushed herself off.
As the sun started to peak through her windows Lith was almost finished getting ready. She placed two round earrings in each before wrapping her face in a veil, only keeping her eyes revealed with slits for the ears. She grabbed her staff, strapping it to her back. Then finally, she put on the bear head shoulders, both the scalps of young black bears, never allowed to reach adulthood.
Once she stepped out of the hut, behind her were the Hatchet Hills. Their trees and grass gave a single spot of beauty to the ruined Ghostlands. In front of Lith were two great stone walls, waters pouring down them. From each protruded the sculptures of snakes, their heads raised high. The Amani Pass. Lith looked at the road pensively, "Once a great nation... But so long ago fallen... I can hear the cries of ya ancestors even still. They long for vengeance against their enemies."
She turned finally before going off on her way, "They shall have their revenge. Perhaps then, through blood their howls will subside."
with my own lifeblood. And you, my Tyrians,
harry with hatred all his line, his race to come:
make that offering to my ashes, send it down below.
No love between our peoples, ever, no pacts of peace!
Come rising up from my bones, you avenger still unknown,
to stalk those Trojan settlers, hunt with fire and iron,
now or in time to come, whenever the power is yours.
Shore clash with shore, sea against sea and sword
against sword-this my curse-war between all
our peoples, all their children, endless war!
-Queen Dido of Carthage
Virgil's The Aeneid, Book Four: The Tragic Queen of Carthage
A Harrowing Path
His great maw lowered with a quick drop, almost as if his jaw unhinged. Within were the vicious canines, gleaming through the filth and saliva. Outwards came his roar, raging eyes focused on their target. He lifted off to his hind legs, massive clawed paws in the air now, black fur bristling.
Lith stood still. Her body was frozen in place as if tight ropes bound her. All she could do was stare into the eyes of the bear, so petrified that she could not even take a breath. It was not that she feared to make noise and so stopped. No, her very lungs would not function. Her heart had lost the will to contract. The eyes of the bear made her body simply cease, beyond fright or terror. That death was so inevitable, it was almost as if death had already come and just left her shell.
The bear stared for only moments more. He seemed to take in her look, the blue skin, cloths and leathers of animals that adorned her body, and those fierce red eyes of her people. Lith's image reflected within his own eyes, becoming so pristine that she was there, as clear as she was in reality. Then, with only the cruel instinct of the beast, the black bear fell upon Lith and consumed her. Flesh was torn away, fat licked clean, until only the bones remained...
And then the bones were broken, cracking into shards. And the bear gorged on the sweet marrow, savage teeth snapping Lith's bones in two, his tongue and snout sucking the marrow clean out...
Lith sat up awakened, her eyes staring into into the wood and green leaf walls of the hut she slept in. She wiped the sweat from her brow, pausing the look at the moisture in her shaking hand. Her lips raised, teeth bared as she grabbed her blanket and threw it off at the wall. It landed just a foot short, softly hitting the ground.
"That dream," she mumbled in almost completely unaccented common, "It was of my vision... It refuses to stop haunting me." Lith brought her knees to her chest, wrapping arms tightly around them and resting her chin on top. "If ya think ya can deter me with your mind games spirits you are sorely mistaken. No one and nothing may stand in the path of champions. Not men an' surely not spirits who have lost their freedom." With that she stood up and brushed herself off.
As the sun started to peak through her windows Lith was almost finished getting ready. She placed two round earrings in each before wrapping her face in a veil, only keeping her eyes revealed with slits for the ears. She grabbed her staff, strapping it to her back. Then finally, she put on the bear head shoulders, both the scalps of young black bears, never allowed to reach adulthood.
Once she stepped out of the hut, behind her were the Hatchet Hills. Their trees and grass gave a single spot of beauty to the ruined Ghostlands. In front of Lith were two great stone walls, waters pouring down them. From each protruded the sculptures of snakes, their heads raised high. The Amani Pass. Lith looked at the road pensively, "Once a great nation... But so long ago fallen... I can hear the cries of ya ancestors even still. They long for vengeance against their enemies."
She turned finally before going off on her way, "They shall have their revenge. Perhaps then, through blood their howls will subside."
![[Image: c9eda896-b205-41b9-9f52-22b1e122210f.jpg]](http://i246.photobucket.com/albums/gg115/Duraza_Darkom/c9eda896-b205-41b9-9f52-22b1e122210f.jpg)