Now that he thought about it, he couldn't recall a time he had listened to Aisling. Had he ever asked her where she came from or how she was able to talk to Pangur? It had never mattered to him before. Why would it matter where she had come from if she had been here with him <i>now</i>? The past had never been important to the two of them. They had been forever stuck in the present, lost and in love in the present, and nothing else mattered but God. Now Kiche began to wonder, wonder about what their future could have been, wonder if he should have asked her about her past. The unshakable taste of remorse lingered in his mouth, and he thought of all the things he had never asked and never listened for.
However... there had been that one moment, on the day he'd kissed her. He had been singing a song from the black box, and she had told him that her mother had taught her the songs she new. A new wave of grief nearly knocked him from his feet as the melodious echo of her voice tickled his ear again. <i>"When the summer's ceased its gleaning, when the corn is past its prime, when adventure's lost its meaning, I'll be homeward bound in time."</i> He ached from the bruise these words left on his heart. Desperately, he clung to every note and every word, cherishing each one before tucking it away in the recesses of his heart. <i>When the adventure's lost its meaning...</i> Life really <i>had</i> lost it's meaning... Did that mean she would be...
He had forgotten where he was for a heartbeat, although his reverie had not stolen his attention for more than a moment. When he returned to reality, he was once again startled by the strange wolf. His soul cried out in joy and disbelief every time he looked at her. Kiche was <i>drawn</i> to her in the worst way possible, as if she was the only cure to a disease that was claiming his soul. He held his breath and ate up every word as if it were an elixir that would easy the pain. Maybe her voice sounded a little like Aisling's. "<b><i>I</i> want to listen,</b>" he breathed softly, reclining slowly and sliding forward into the snow.
"<b>I guess the best place to start is in the beginning.</b>"
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(This post was last modified: Jan 26, 2012, 09:00 PM by Kiche.)