They remained in
the throne room for a few more minutes, silent and unmoving. Then Finabard
commanded, “Let her go.” The guards stepped away from her. Kristin collapsed onto
her side. The woman, or, really, the sorceress Kimber, was gone.
“Can you stand
up?” Finabard inquired. If Kristin had not been in the present circumstances,
she might have called his tone kind and his face handsome. But she was here, in
the throne room of the Sorceress Kimber, crumpled on the ground in front of the
newly appointed Captain of the Guard. This was not a place to grasp at kindness
or handsomeness.
In response to
his question, she carefully picked herself up off the ground and struggled
shakily to her feet. He nodded briskly, and then turned to the guards. “You are
dismissed. Return to the barracks and await further orders.” In unison, they
chanted “Yes Sir,” turned, and marched out the golden door.
“Follow
me,” he told her, and made his way towards another great door, this one silver.
Kristin struggled to keep up, even though Finabard adjusted his pace to
compensate for her condition. Halfway across the throne room, she collapsed.
She just couldn’t do it. She wasn’t useful for anything. She could barely walk
across the room. He would kill her, and she would be with Clara again. That was
all she wanted. Tears started streaming down her face.
Without a word,
Finabard came over and looked down at her. Without a word, he lifted her gently
off the floor and carried her through the silver door. This led into a bright
dining room, all made of white marble. From here he turned, and carried her
through a small wooden door into what she could only describe as heaven.
Food. The room
was filled with food. Food being chopped, food being baked, food being tossed
into salads. Food cooking, food cooling, food hanging from the ceiling. An old,
chubby woman was overseeing it all, and her assistants scuttled back and forth,
stirring, adding, popping things into ovens, taking things out of ovens,
putting more wood on the fire, peeling, mincing, trying, adding a pinch of
salt, trying again, and doing all the things generally associated with food and
its preparation.
Finabard crossed
to a cot in the far corner of the room and laid Kristen gingerly down on it. He
covered her with a warm blanket, crossed to the chubby woman, said something to
her, and left.
Kristin just laid
there. She didn’t try to move, or think, or even sleep. She just let the room
take her in and surround her in its warmth and comfort. After a while, the
chubby woman came and set a tray of something down by her bed. Kristin slowly
summoned her strength a got up to look at it.
Mushroom stew, a
warm, fresh, quarter-loaf of bread, and a blue-colored fizzing drink. Kristin
wolfed it down eagerly. The drink was sweet, yet sour as well. When she
finished, she felt content to lay down and sleep.
Shadows haunted
her dreams. Laughing sadistically, men with eye-patches chased her down
never-ending passageways lined with giant iron doors. Every time she tried to
open a door, it was locked. Finally, a door opened, and out rushed a red,
sticky liquid. It seeped into her mouth, nose, eyes and ears, and as she
drowned in it, she heard a little girl screaming her name.
Kristin awoke tangled
in her blanket and thrashing around on the floor. Most of the kitchen staff was
staring down at her with wide, frightened eyes. The chubby woman looked up form
kneading bread dough.
“Good, you’re up.
All of you, back to work. She’s not going to explode.” The staff scattered back
to their business. Kristin stood up. She still felt weak, but it wasn’t nearly
as bad as it had been. That blue fizzy drink must’ve been some type of tonic. She made her little cot, then sat on it, at a
loss as to what she should do.
The chubby woman
noticed her dilemma. “My name is Gretel. Call me Cook. You’ll have something to
do soon enough. Right now, eat.” Gretel gestured toward a bubbling pot of porridge
hanging over the fire. Kristin found a bowl and liberally spooned hot porridge into
it. She slurped it down quickly. It was bland and tasteless, but warm in her stomach
and quietly bracing.
She took her bowl
to the washbasin and started to wash dishes. Every so often, she thought she
felt Cook’s eyes drift over to her, yet whenever Kristin turned, Cook quickly
looked down at her bread or her soup or whatever she was working on at the
moment. Once Kristin thought she saw her shake her head, almost in pity.
The morning
passed this way, rather uneventfully. Lunch came and went, and the afternoon
wore on. Kristin spent her time helping out any way she could, though cooking
had never been her strong suit. Around three o’clock, Cook came up to her.
“Now it is time
to do what you were brought here for. Come with me.” Kristin followed her out
the side kitchen door and into the area where the livestock where kept. Cook
went straight to the cattle and picked out a rather fat, sleepy-looking cow. She
led it out of the pen and handed the rope to Kristin.
“You,” she stated
matter-of-factly, as if it was nothing out of the ordinary, “Are going to be
the new dragon-keeper.”
Dum Dum Dum Duuum!!! :D
ReplyDeleteDarn it Cliffhangers.