<blockquote><ul><span style='font-size:7pt;line-height:100%'>quote from "It Is Good To Wait in Silence for the Lord God to Save: Lamentations 3:17-26"</span></li></ul>
There was something dead in the jaws of the half-wolf. It was a rabbit, twisted and broken... yet, remarkably unbloodied. There was no scarlet stain smeared on his jaws that cradled the dead body so gently, so carefully. This was not a rabbit that had been hunted and murdered. In fact, it had been dead for quite some time already, that much was obvious from the putrid stench that haunted the corpse. Flies buzzed jubilantly about the ginger muzzle of the priest, and a warning growl rose from his throat. <i>This one isn't for you.</i> This rabbit wasn't for him, either. This rabbit was for Pangur, now, floating away in whatever afterlife awaited them all, be it heaven or hell.
And so Kiche would be the undertaker. He would bury it.
Perhaps a burial would have been a strange practice for a wolf, but Kiche knew little of wolves. Perhaps he could have eaten the rabbit —he had been considering it, originally. Not far from the borders of the Hollow, he had stumbled upon the creature, limp and lifeless. It hadn't been dead for <i>too</i> long. And... although he was loath to admit it, the taste of blood and meat made his mouth water. Maybe it was the smell, and maybe it was his morals, but as the red saint stood over the body, he began to feel sick to his stomach. It had been so long since he had last thrown up, he had thought he was past that. But no. He still felt <i>dirty</i>, wrong, vile. <i>This one isn't for you,</i> he told himself. Instead of breaking his fast on this pitiful departed soul, he carried it here into the sea of wavering grasses and began to dig a hole. As the half-wolf worked, he whispered prayers, "<b>My soul is deprived of peace, I have forgotten what happiness is; I tell myself my future is lost, all that I hoped for from the Lord.</b>" The soil was thick and hard, here, for some reason, and the effort made him grunt and pant. But he continued, "<b>The thought of my homeless poverty is wormwood and gall; remembering it over and over leaves my soul downcast within me. But I will call this to mind, as my reason to have hope: the favors of the Lord are not exhausted... </b>" His breath was nearly exhausted. "<b>...his mercies are not spent; they are renewed each morning, so great is his faithfulness. My portion is the Lord, says my soul; therefore will I hope in him.</b>" This labor, one of penitence and love, began to ease the burden that had fallen upon his troubled soul. These words, which had been repeated so often on those Sunday mornings by the black box came back to him easily. Like the smile of a long lost friend, they washed away his grief and shame. "<b>Good is the Lord to one, who waits for him, to the soul that seeks him; it is good to hope in silence for the saving help of the Lord.</b>" Finally done, he gazed down at his work.
It appeared he had dug deeper than he had intended to.
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(This post was last modified: Apr 23, 2012, 03:45 AM by Kiche.)