All Soul’s Day. According to the tradition, tonight is the day to remember the dead. And each one has a way to do it.
When
I was a kid, while the other kids at the orphanage met at the main room
to tell and listen to creepy stories about evil spirits, Evelyn and I
used to stay in our trunks and just have a thought about our mum and
dad, and wonder if they cared for us from wherever they might be. We
would have lit a candle for them, but we weren’t allowed to use fire in
our rooms.
Now that things have changed, this celebration makes
me think we could actually do something to remember our loved ones.
There are many we have lost, Kyle more than me, and I think he will want
to, at least, spare a thought at them.
But when I suggest it to him, he just shows a stupid smile and says “Fireflies!”
I perk a brow. “Fireflies? What do you mean?”
“We
can catch fireflies and fill flasks with them, then hang them in the
porch, and release them in the morning. They do that for All Soul’s Day
in Antiva”, he grins.
Catching bugs, of course. He loves that,
and I guess he didn’t have a chance to do this since Darn is gone. My
big, big child. I resist the temptation to mess his hair.
“All right” I give up. “We’ll go catching fireflies this evening”
And he seems so happy I can’t help but smile myself. So contagious.
Nelson
opens the way, panting and barking and playing. He has grown up a lot
in these months, but even if he looks like an adult dog, he’s still a
puppy. I hope he won’t get lost, because I’m keeping an eye on Kyle,
whose sense of direction is much worse than the cub’s, and needs more
vigilance.
He’s delighted with the hunting, and I can see him
jumping here and there, sometimes catching them in the bushes, sometimes
in flight, like a cat, and he’s having so much fun I soon forget it is
getting late and we’re too far from our home. Since here we don’t have
the spooky spirit costume parades they celebrate in places like Antiva,
at least we have a nicer way to spend the night than staying at home
praying as the Chantry asks for this day.
I take a deep breath
and smile. The night is cold, but clear, so we can see where we step.
The stars shine bright in the sky and if any spirit has been attracted
by the prayers, as some people say, they don’t seem to want to bother
us. And of course, as soon as I keep my eyes off Kyle, he disappears.
I
hear Nelson yapping, and I turn my head. “Where’s Kyle?”. The mabari
tilts his head and whines. “Oh! You weren’t watching either?” I ask him,
as if he could reply. “Awesome. He will be lost and I won’t see him
until tomorrow morning”. Nelson lowers his ears, a bit ashamed, and I
sigh. “All right, cub, It’s not your fault. Just help me find him with
your nose, okay?”
And before I can say anything else, Nelson
barks happily and rushes ahead, disappearing among the bushes. I try to
follow him… but except from some noises which soon fade, I have no idea
where he has gone.
Awesome.
Now it is me the one who is lost.
All
right. Not exactly lost. I know I can find my way back home whenever I
want to, but I’m not going back without Kyle and Nelson and I need to
find them first, so instead of waiting for them there as a part of my
brain tells me I should do, I start walking in the direction I saw
Nelson disappearing. From time to time I hear noises here and there, so I
try to follow them. After all it is late at night and, apart from man
and dog, who else could have been making the bushes move?
And suddenly I see her.
She’s
small, cute and blonde, and she reminds me of Grace, the human child
Kyle, Darn and me saved that day from the monster spider. I almost step
on her, but fortunately the night is so clear I can see her sitting
calmly on the grass, playing with a worn out ragdoll, and even if she
should be scared, she doesn’t seem so at all. I stop and look at her.
“What are you doing here, little one?”
She
takes her eyes away from her doll and smiles at me with a charming,
disarming smile. “Playing” she says. At first I though she was four or
five, but now that I look at her eyes I think she’s older. Six, even
more. Just she’s so small and delicate. It’s hard to believe she’s
human.
“Isn’t it a bit late? Your parents will be worried if they realize you’re not at home”
She shrugs. “Mom and dad don’t care for me anymore”
I
frown. How can her parents not be worried? I’m about to argue when I
see the bruises. The right half of her face, almost hidden by her hair,
has an ugly shade of purple. At first I had thought it was the shadows,
but now I see it is probably due to a terrible blow.
So that’s
the problem. Mistreated girl. My heart aches. Even if I’m not very fond
on children, I can’t understand how someone can hurt a child, and much
less their own parents. Then I remember my own past, and I have to admit
it. What I consider normal it’s often not what the world considers
normal itself.
“All right, honey… Maybe… we can find a place for
you?” Damn it damn it damn it, I start to think. What am I going to do
with this girl? I can’t send her back home but I can’t leave her in the
woods. Wonderful.
The girl smiles again with her charming smile.
“I have a secret place! Do you want me to show you?”. She gets up and
reaches for my hand, and, confused, I let her do. I have to find Kyle,
says a part of my brain, but another one struggles. I can’t leave this
child alone. Let’s see that secret place, I think, and maybe if she’s
safe there, I can go back to find Kyle.
“All right, honey”, I
say, holding her hand and following her. Poor thing. Her hand is frozen.
She must have been out longer than I thought. “Is it a safe place?”
She nods energically. “It’s where I hide from the monsters”
“Monsters?”
I ask. I try to notice the places we’re walking through, so I can find
my way back, but after a while I have the feeling we’re moving in
circles, and I wonder how she finds the way. The place is becoming
gloomier, and only the reflection of light of the moon and stars in the
landscape allow my elven eyes to have a glimpse of where we are. Even
the fireflies seem to have disappeared now. I’m starting to ponder if
this girl knows exactly where she goes.
“The dark men. The
shadows. They come for me at night. They scare me so much…” she says,
and I feel her tiny hand tremble. She raises her cute face to look at me
and I can read the plea in her eyes. “Will you… protect me?”
I’m
about to ask her how it is that she is outside at night if she’s so
scared of the monsters, but the only mention of shadows makes me shiver.
I know what it is. I have had my own shadows haunting me for years. I
swallow and nod. “I will protect you, sweetie”, I promise, and then I
realize I don’t even know her name, so I ask her. I can’t spend all the
time calling her “Honey”.
“Claudine” she says. Sounds Orlesian, I
think. How weird. Orlesian names probably were popular some years ago,
when Orlais dominated Ferelden, but not now. Though Ryan told me once
there were Orlesian sympathizers near Highever, in Amaranthine. Maybe
this girl’s family didn’t know the domination is over. It happens
sometimes in isolated places… and this one seems isolated enough for me.
“Come. It is close”
She
is right. We are leaving the woods, and as we walk outside, I can see a
brook, running down a canyon under a stone bridge. At the other side of
the river, the moonlight lets me guess the shapes of stone walls and
rocks. Ruins. A perfect place for a girl to hide and play. But then, why
don’t I like how they look?
And suddenly we hear the noise,
almost at the same time. Behind us. The bushes moving, heavy steps.
Claudine’s face distorts in a grimace of terror. “Chevaliers! They’re
coming for us!!! Hurry, hurry up!” and she pulls my hand towards the
bridge. Before I turn to look ahead I have a glimpse of a dark shape
running towards us, a big, beastly thing, blurry as if it didn’t belong
to this world, with one bright eye in the middle of its chest, and
somehow it is that bright eye which scares me the most. It seems to move
in slow motion, but no matter how fast we run, it is each time closer
to us and I am about to scream with terror, but not a single sound can
get out of my throat and I run and run because I know that once we cross
the bridge, Claudine and me will be safe in her secret place and…
I
trip, and I lose Claudine’s hand grip. She stops for a moment, her eyes
wide. “No!! He will kill me again!!!” she screams, and I try to reach
for her hand, like in slow motion, but the shadow is too close, and I
just can say “Go! Don’t wait for me!”, before the one-eyed thing jumps
over me and puts its hands around my neck…
I’m still
struggling when I open my eyes and see Kyle’s concerned face while he’s
hugging me. I stop moving and look at him confused, then I raise a hand
to my neck and I realize I’m wearing his amulet against ghosts.
“Are you all right?”
I nod. “Claudine…” I mumble, suddenly remembering the little girl. “Where is she?”
“She’s
back home, my love” he replies. “She’s back home”. But he’s not looking
at me. He’s looking behind me, where the bridge and the ruins and the
stones were, and I turn my head to look back. I shiver when I realize
than if I had tried to cross that bridge, I would have fallen down to
the brook, a fall which would have caused my death, because there was no
way to cross it. Only the half at this side of the river stays there.
The other one probably crumbled down ages ago…
And the walls and stones I mistook for some ruins… now look like gravestones.
Suddenly
I understand. The danger wasn’t the monster. The danger was the spirit
who was still running away from whatever killed her, dragging me with
her curse. I’m grateful to the amulet, now I can see what living ones
see.
And then I realize that, to put it around my neck, Kyle has
had to take it off his… and that’s why he’s not looking at me. He’s
looking at the graveyard, mesmerized.
I shake his shoulders. “Wake up, Kyle! Don’t look at them!!”
He
slowly turns his face to me and smiles, takes a lock of hair from my
eyes and kisses my forehead. “Don’t worry, love. They have no power over
us there. I have this”. And he raises proud the jar full of fireflies
he’s carrying in one hand.
“I… could have died…”, I mutter. “And you still worry about your fireflies!”.
Nelson
interrupts me, whining and digging under one of the closest pillars of
the broken bridge, and suddenly he takes something in his mouth. I get
up, and walk a bit hesitantly towards him. I look at the thing and
freeze.
It’s a torn, dirty and very, very old ragdoll. I feel all
my hair up when I recognize it, and even more when I look down, to the
place where Nelson found the doll.
On the ground, half buried,
now I can see a small skull. Smashed on its right side. I remember a
shade of purple in a little girl’s face and I cringe. “So she never made
it”. She never crossed the bridge. She never… arrived to her safe
place.
Taking the doll from the cub’s mouth, I toss it with all
my strength to the other side of the bridge. Maybe her spirit will find
peace if her toy is there. Nelson whines, but he makes no attempt to go
after it. Then I grab Kyle’s arm and we start walking back home. He
still holds with one hand the jar full of fireflies. I realize that’s
probably what I thought it was the monster’s only eye, I think, and I
laugh at my own stupidity. I mistook my Kyle for a monster!!!
“You still want to put them on the porch?” I ask him. He looks at the jar and nods.
“They say they keep spirits away”, he says. And this time, I believe it.
And Maker knows we need it tonight.
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