Article: 5339 of alt.pub.dragons-inn Newsgroups: alt.pub.dragons-inn Path: pilchuck!li From: li@Data-IO.COM (Phyllis Rostykus) Subject: [MG] Moonlight and Shadows Message-ID: <1993Apr20.192753.9740@data-io.com> Sender: news@data-io.com (The News) Organization: Data I/O Corporation Date: Tue, 20 Apr 1993 19:27:53 GMT Sandra was standing on the dark shore of the Ceru, the dying moon lighting the clouds into molten silver all along the horizon. She looked away and saw a woman. A beautiful woman with white skin, black clothing and wild hair. The black eyes were kind and they were completely and soley focussed on Sandra. The woman smiled at her. It was a smile that crinkled the corners of her eyes. The moonlight glinted off the metal figure in the hollow of her throat, a loop over a cross. "I... I don't hurt..." Sandra said with wonder. "Are you some kinda magician or something? Someone'd snatch me outta the air?" The black eyes narrowed just a touch, the woman's face grew serious. She shook her head and sighed, "No." "Oh." said Sandra, the realization tightened her throat. Then she slowly nodded in understanding. "O.K. So, I'm dead?" The woman nodded and watched her. Sandra thought for a long moment. The woman waited quietly, patiently, and somehow Sandra knew that she was waiting for Sandra to be ready. Sandra took a look at the silvered beauty around her, remembered the pain, the desperation and despair that had driven her here. She had already said her good-byes. So, with a whole heart, she grinned at the woman and said, "O.K. Where to now?" The woman smiled at the question. It was a smile that warmed Sandra. "Here... take my hand." The woman's hold was gentle and firm, and as much as Sandra hated to admit it, the hold was comforting. There was the sound of wings... * * * A slender figure hopped down from the railing where Sandra had jumped from, savoring the power it had gotten from the death. If there had been anyone to see it, they would have seen a parody in smoke and shadow of the girl that had just jumped. The broken, swollen hand, the bruises, the crookedness in the walk that cradled one tender side, one of the two steel grey eyes with one pupil dialated to pure black. It... she... also had the strong, slender build of the young girl, the long, thick, slightly curled black hair, the heart shaped face, and the smooth skin that only the young have. Beauty, true beauty was in that figure as well. The beauty made the brokeness that much more terrible. Slender fingers, whiter than blind eyes, bleached bones, or frost, picked up five coins. It's first material offering. The little god of despair walked down the Arcade, being very quiet, as quiet as a once mildly successful thief had been. She had learned from the harsher lessons her brothers had died by. She had been there for the other three deaths. The fact of her being what she was had filled the events with a sweetness that she had sipped of like a black hummingbird at a blood red flower. She had witnessed the mob scene the first, impatient one had incited and the forcing of it back into the boring otherwhen of the gods by the firecat. The young boy's despair had tasted as young trust and love broken against rock and blows. The dismemberment of the one who had tried to take the white-winged one on straight on had been a shock. She had not known their enemy could rend as they did. The last, in the jewelled glen, had been the sweetest. The despair of the god of devastation and endless misery as it died had been such a surge to her that she had found herself with more form than any of the others who had only eaten of his energies instead of having them offered to them. She mused as she walked. That brother had given her much, though that had not been its intent. Without doing anything, she'd been fed vast amounts of emotional energy from all over the city. The mother with the fevered child. The hundreds in Low Town with little more than a few boards over their heads. The crowd before the filled to overflowing temples. The mage in the Inn when he'd learned of his friend's death. The blonde boy in Low Town faced by a ghost. The thousands in their holes in the earth as the storm had screamed its threats as it blew the houses down like so much tissue. Not all despaired, but enough. Not all died, either, but that hadn't stopped the flow from the breaking of hopes and dreams. Those caught dying in the ruins of their homes had been the most intriguing. She had sat, watching many of them go their slow way, and had only grown stronger. She hadn't had to raise a single finger, risk a single manifestation of her powers. It had all simply come to her. Until this girl. So easy to slip the vision of the river into that ready mind at just the right moment. Just as the unseen and unknown extent of the slavers was a threat that was so simple to magnify beyond all hope. Such tiny expendatures and such amazing results. She couldn't wait to try it again. --------- [ADMIN: Thanks to all who offered Sandra a saviour, and thanks to the one who said that not all stories need happy endings. So. And thanks to Bernie for finding a home line for Sandra, along with encouraging me with that particular little godling. If anyone is keeping track, make Sandra's oneshot a part of the Mage Guild line, and she's definitely dead and gone. Also I want to acknowledge Neil Gaiman as the creator of Death, a character I have attempted to render a poor likeness of here. ] -- Liralen Li | "What you feel can make it real aka Phyllis Rostykus | real as anything you've seen..." li@Data-IO.com | - Peter Gabriel, _So_