Aleksei settled into the lavender, a heavy sigh in his chest. It was strange to be back here again, but he’d be damned before he let them stop him. It had taken him a while to muster the courage to drag himself this far from Wild Rye Fields—grief had a funny way of tangling him up in its vines, probing between his ribs with thorny fingers, digging deep into flesh and muscle, as if searching for empty holes in his heart to nestle in.
In his worst moments since learning of his mother’s murder, Aleksei had wanted to die. He had wanted to dig a hole and lie in it. Just let the wind push soil and seeds over him, let his body be the foundations for life anew. @Askan had tried to help, somewhat, but he was so Askan that it was hard to get anything beyond a gruff “sorry man”. It was all right though—Wild Rye’s second was far from an emotional kind of guy, and Aleksei hadn’t expected anything more. He wasn’t disappointed. Honestly, he was sort of glad. With Askan, you got what you got; honesty, in a blunt and grumpy sort of way, that beat all false sympathies that Aleksei would have gotten elsewhere.
Yeah. It was all right.
Resting in the Ethos, he felt a quiet sort of calmness wash over him. He had time to think. Sure, Aleksei had regrets. If he could turn back time, fix the mistakes he had made, he would. But no, he was firmly within the present, and there was no force that could turn back the clock. He shifted, laying on his side, and closed his eyes. For a brief moment, he’d lay with his family. He wondered if his mother was buried here, too—he hoped so. Kisla wouldn’t want to be anywhere else. In a morbid sort of way, he imagined he was nestled between the two, as if a cub once more, and smiled weakly to himself. You’re weird, he chastised himself, opting to take in the sounds and the smells around him instead of indulging in the oddity that was the Baranski’s own thoughts.
Lavender and damp soil, redwood and pine needles. The chattering of a squirrel, the distant tac-tac-tac of a woodpecker. It was familiar and foreign all at the same time. He inhaled deeply, let it settle in his lungs, and then released it out in a deep sigh. He wouldn’t blame himself for his mother’s death. He couldn’t go through the pain and the pressure again. No, this was just an accident. A freak accident. Another strike of bad luck against his family.
If he wasn’t before, Aleksei was now convinced that his was a cursed heritage.
(This post was last modified: Sep 01, 2017, 10:18 PM by Aleksei.)