Friday 27 March 2015

Luc' 7

~

Two weeks later

“Sir, I’m not sure about this,” Zach warned.
          Sir set his hands down and leant onto the table. Even in a trance state the wolf was more powerful than he’d realised. Why had he not considered that? It growled and snapped with the man’s mouth. Sir set his mouth into a line. How strange not to feel fear in these moments. Seeing the hope in others wasn’t always positive. It blinded him, he admitted to himself. Easy now. Fear was not present but anxiety, like tickling fingers, teased and brushed. He shivered, perhaps visibly as the wolf snarled louder. It pulled and jerked in Zach and the other’s hold.
          Had the wolf-man not been in a trance state it would have taken over by now.
          “Hate,” he told it and slammed his hand down onto the table. In the next moment he stood upright. The method would not work. The wolf was already angry, hateful. It didn’t need force. Understanding perhaps. Sir closed his eyes. “You will keep a tight hold,” he told the two.
          Sir travelled up the table and arrived behind. The wolf strained the man’s neck whilst it looked back. As Sir shook back the sleeve of his cloak and raised his hand its eyes shot wide. “Hush,” Sir whispered to it and set his hand down. The wolf-man’s black hair was soft, not unlike a dog’s fur, yet silkier. “You hate. You kill. The cycle will not end,” Sir slid his hand along the wolf-man’s forehead. The wolf panted. Sir watched the blood pulse in the wolf-man’s neck. It was undecided over what to do? “You are afraid,” he was getting somewhere. The blood in the wolf-man’s neck was slowing. It didn’t seem to be straining every muscle at its command. Sir refused to smile. “You do not know what is happening. Sleep.”
          It strained again, it lashed out and barked ferociously using the man’s voice.
          “Sleep,” Sir repeated. “Sleep now,” he coaxed and watched the wolf-man’s eyes close. Sweat trickled like small rivers down his neck and his hair. Sir lifted his hand away and nodded to the two with him. “Leave us, we will be fine.”
          They looked at him as if he were crazy. Sir observed the wolf-man. Maybe he was a little crazy. “Wake,” he said to the wolf-man as the door behind him closed. The second method wasn’t going to work either. As the wolf-man’s eyes opened Sir raised his eyebrows. At least, not on its own.
          “What happened?” The wolf-man wondered to him.
          “It is angry and hateful. I cannot give it a voice.” He observed the wolf-man’s response.
          “You can’t?” He was clearly disappointed. To his credit he was still polite.
          “I can’t. You can.”
          The wolf-man raised his eyebrows now. Me? He seemed to wonder. He probably thought him crazy too.
          “Have you attempted to speak to it before?” Sir asked as he sat down.
          The wolf-man focused on his hands. He studied his palms intently as though avoiding the question. Sit waited. “No. The wolf frightens me.”
          “Frightens you,” Sir echoed. He should have expected that maybe. “Why?”
          “Why? It’s out of control.”
          I think I’m beginning to understand. You hate the wolf as much as it hates humans. You won’t accept it as part of you. Time to change tactic a bit. “You shun the wolf. You won’t give it a voice because you don’t want to hear what it has to say. You must accept that it is part of you and you are part of it,” Sir sighed before he knew it. Frustration commanded his words. He would be regretting it later. “You are the one who made it hate humans.”
          “What?” The wolf-man exclaimed, obviously offended at the very thought.
          “You have spoken to me of your younger days when the wolf was younger than yourself. You kept it shut away, as if it were in a tiny cage. If you do not allow an animal freedom would you expect it to have any respect for the race which imprisoned it?”
          “That wasn’t my fault,” the wolf-man said pointedly. He demonstrated that with his finger pointed down onto the table.
          “Yes, it was. You may not have grown up with your people but you were in control of it in your younger years,” he told the wolf-man and his tone was firm.
          “How was I supposed to let it escape? It would have attacked everyone. Don’t you sit there and talk of what you don’t…”
          “That is enough,” Sir affirmed and loudly. If the wolf-man wasn’t going to take responsibility they would never get anywhere. The wolf blamed him, it was why it never allowed the wolf-man out. Why should it? The wolf was imprisoned for decades. The wolf-man needed to understand that or it would never work. And I cannot give up now. “Speak to the wolf. Now.” The wolf-man opened his mouth but there wasn’t going to be any questioning and no more excuses.. “Now.”
          The wolf-man groaned and swore. He bit his tongue, Sir noticed. Maybe to not swear directly to him. So respect was growing. Good. The wolf-man sighed the last of his annoyance or aggravation. “How?” He asked.
          Sir could only go on instinct, a little insight as well. “Close your eyes and breath. Picture a place you know the wolf is most comfortable and you the most vulnerable. See if it will approach.”
          “Do I speak aloud?” The wolf-man asked. His voice slurred a little. Sleep clung to him as much as alcohol saturated the mind.
          “Speak how the wolf feels comfortable. You aren’t there for yourself. You are there for the wolf only.”

Friday 20 March 2015

Luc'6 part 2

          “Wait,” the wolf-man requested. Sir looked back over his shoulder. His leaving was negotiable. Anything, in fact, was negotiable to an extent. “I will talk if you stay,” the wolf-man admitted. In defeat? He averted his eyes onto the blanket covering his form.
          “Speak,” Sir told him. He took up his seat.
          The wolf-man traced the pattern of the blanket with his fingers until the pattern reached an end. His hands were rough, his nails dirty. Had he noticed that before? The wolf-man swallowed and tilted his head down a bit further.
          “I think I’m controlled. We aren’t one, we aren’t two. We’re both a part of one another and apart from one another,” his mouth lifted just a little bit, “I don’t understand the wolf.”
          Sir leant forward onto his stick. What was it about the wolf and the man, that so intrigued? Destiny and the Fates. What else could it be after all? “The wolf doesn’t understand you either,” he surmised. “Does it know speech? Can it talk or communicate at all?”
          The wolf-man…Luc’? Sir filed it away for later. More important things about for now. The wolf-man made eye contact, hesitantly, possibly even furtively. What was he afraid of? The wolf would come? Sir narrowed his eyes. Maybe so.
          “It hears but it doesn’t understand. It is angered by speech.”
          “Perhaps I may teach the wolf and give it voice. One who communicates,” he lifted his fingers from the stick’s rounded head, “may express his emotions and wants.” You want to not be alone. “I can give you control over it. The wolf should not rule you.”
          “Do you have a name?”
          Sir lifted his gaze and did not expect to find the wolf-man looking at him. They made eye contact. It didn’t break. Trust ought to travel in both directions at all times. The scales did not always have to tip one way or the other. “Once. My name is Sir.”
          “Sir? That is not a name,” the wolf-man observed and Sir raised his lips into a smile.
          “It is not. I do not remember my name. It has been a long time since I used it.”
          The wolf-man bowed his head down.

Friday 13 March 2015

Luc' 6 part 1

~

The morning light was harsh on the eyes. Still too close to winter the sun never expressed its warmth well. Sir scanned the light further. The sun never reached its high height in these times either. Much like an old man. Sir shifted. His joints were old. They complained of their age, especially in the morning. When the cold reminded just how many winters had passed observed or unobserved. If the wolf-man would agree everything could be set right.
          “Zach,” he croaked down the room. It was as if he were a father calling for his son. Sir smiled grim. My son. He rolled his eyes.
          “Sir?” Zach replied from the doorway.
          “Fetch me my stick. How is the man?” Sir accepted the stick as Zach gave it to him. Zach stood up straight, hands behind his back. You’ve always taken pride in your work dear boy.
          “The man complained of his leg in the night. We gave him something for it and he slept through.”
          Something wasn’t said.
          “Sir…he’s a wolf in his heart.”
          “Is he?” Sir replied. It wasn’t that much a revelation.
          “He moans in his sleep. I had reports of him growling.”
          Sir leant down onto the stick and shuffled across the room getting himself organised. “He is both wolf and man. So long as he does no harm you should not worry.” He met Zach’s brown eyes. “I will worry about that. You have more important things to tend to.”
          “Sir,” Zach bowed his head and left.
          Such a good lad. Now, let’s see how you are. Sir pulled the hood of his cloak up and snaked from the room to the wolf-man four doors down.
          “You’re awake. Good.” he shuffled a bit across bare wood floors and sat next to the bed. The wolf-man watched him all the way across. Did he always watch? Trust needed to be earned. Clearly. “I have a proposal I would like you to consider.”
          The wolf-man raised both his eyebrows and crossed his arms over his chest. Sir noted it and moved on.
          “Stay here,” he proposed. “I will help you.”
          “Help me?”
          “Yes.”
          “How could you help me?” He sounded so surly, distasteful. His face spoke it as well. Sir set his eyes on the rise of the others’ lip. It snarled. The wolf.
          “Tell me of your wolf. Does it control you, do you control it? Are you one or splintered?” To pose but a few questions.
          The wolf-man studied him almost as though he couldn’t believe his ears. Surely someone had tried to help before. Though maybe not. Why else would a man allow a creature within him to kill without thought or mercy. Untested waters could be dangerous. How turbulent they could be was unclear. Perhaps both of them would drown beneath the waves or possibly reach a common shore.
          “The wolf doesn’t like you.”
          “Do you?” Sir fired back. He kept his face clear from any expression.
          The wolf-man went quiet. His eyes flit quickly to his leg and back to Sir’s face. The way the dark eyes seemed to take in every detail it was as if he were searching for something. He never made eye contact at all.
          “Undecided.”
          You trust more than the wolf does. With that in mind Sir told him, “Scales shift constantly in weight. Your leg should be well enough to leave the bed in a few days.” He rose. The stick was more cumbersome now each muscle remembered youth over age. Sir lifted it anyway and strode away from the chair.

Friday 6 March 2015

Luc' 5


~

It did nothing. It was covered in web-like wrinkles and spoke of times lost, perhaps times missed. It didn’t look that threatening. Maybe it could be trusted. Not for the first time that day fear shivered through him and left a chill which stole his breath as surely as the winter’s ice. Wolf swallowed. He licked his lips. Easy, easy. The hand felt both frail against his fingers and also strong. He curled his fingers around the palm and relaxed them save for breaking the old one’s hand. He released it. Let it go free.
          Wolf raised his free leg and encircled his hands around his ankle. Laying his cheek against his knee he looked down at the bed and released his breath.
          “I have no name,” he murmured.
          The man did not reply so quickly. Wolf counted his own breaths before the man spoke again. Perhaps the man had missed his words. Why repeat them?
          “Would you like one?”
          Wolf switched his gaze to the man. The elder looked at him through a sidelong grey-blue glance. Like one?
          “What would you ask for in return?”
          In the next moment he knew without knowing why that the man wasn’t going to rush in answering anything. In some ways, that was some sort of reassurance. Though he wouldn’t be able to say why that was. “Nothing. The Fates have brought us together for a reason.”
          “The Fates?” He believes in that? In them?
          “There are three Fates.”
          “I know.”
          The man swallowed before, “What are they? If you know.”
          Wolf set his eyes on the door. “The past,” then the man, “the present,” finally he raised his eyes through the ceiling into the now dark sky, “the future.”
          The man nodded. “You are right.”
          Wolf settled his dark gaze on the bed. “Yes. I would like a name.” Instead of my description.
          “In time, we will find yours. Rest now. I will see that you have some food and we will resume this in the morning.