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Rated: E · Short Story · Emotional · #1177636
This work in progress is set in Celtic Cornwall.
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         I huddle closer to the warmth of the fire as a
draft blows through the small stone house. A spark jumps
up from the burning wood and I watch as it lands on the
threadbare rag rug. I can see the small brown-rimmed
holes where it has been singed by other such sparks. I
stare deep into the fire and watch its flames sway and
touch one another in brief greeting. The fast-moving
forks of light lull my pained mind and the cloud that
rests always on my mind lifts. For a while, perhaps and
hour, my life will be calm and I will be able to pretend
that I am alright.
         A sickly wail wakes me. I start from where I
have drifted to sleep by the fire. I rub my face to coax
sleep from my heavy lids, and my hand comes back covered
in soot. The beginnings of a sob start in my throat, but
I push it back. Crying feels so strange. I have not
cried in at least a year. After the first few months in
this house, the pain was dulled by shock.
         I push myself up from my knees and stumble to
the bundle of furs in one corner of the one-room house.
I lift it in my arms- my child. I tenderly push back the
furs to reveal a tiny, yellowed face. Like always, her
features are twisted into a scream of misery. She is
hungry, but I have nothing to offer; none of us has any
food. I try once again to pacify her feeble wails with
my smallest finger, but once again, it fails. I pull her
fragile body close to mine and rock softly, as much for
my own comfort as hers.
 

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         Hours later, and the thin beam of cold light has
disappeared from around the door. I cut what is left of
the rancid meat from the carcass that hangs on a hook
from the rafters. The cast-iron pot above my fire has
begun to bubble with greed, and I drop the last little
bit of pork into its waiting mouth. I put in a pinch of
the brown herbs that I keep in my soiled belt. That too
will be gone soon. I can find nothing more to do, so I
sit by the fire again. I stare at my friend, the fire,
and watch a flame dance together with its friends in the
blaze. They seem to wave to me, calling me to come and
join their dance. I reach out my hand to stroke them and
let them bathe my hand in warmth. They dance and flicker
over my hand, both strange and familiar to my gaze. I
slowly pull my hand back only when I feel the sharp bite
of the blue flame near the heart of my fire pit. I look
at my hand absently, unable to focus my thoughts on the
scars and burns that cover it.
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