THE
WATCHER
"You!"
Dasha tried to rise but her trembling limbs pierced her
with pain. The shadow of the figure cast down over her as
it approached slowly. She scrambled on the ground to get
herself upright again although she wasn't sure if she had
a chance of even keeping her balance. She quickly attempted
to cast another healing spell on herself.
Her head spun and her vision blurred from the effort but
through the confusion she could see a faint light spread
out from her hand and wash over her body. The effect was
nearly unnoticeable but a small pulse of strength worked
its way through her legs and arms. Pushing away from the
ground she managed to spring up to a shaky standing position
just as the figure grew close and stopped only an arms length
away.
"I won't let you... you almost destroyed..."
she said between short breaths, her knees buckling. As she
fell forward two gray hands caught her shoulders. "No...
I won't allow..." Her vision was filled with dancing
points of light and she could feel the last of her strength
vanishing like fog in the morning sunlight. The last thing
she saw was the face of Adranath, tears streaming down his
face.
"The wait has ended," he said, holding Dasha
close like a child. His tears flowed faster and he began
to sob. "You have returned to us... at long last, you
have finally returned to us!"
* * *
A twinkling of firelight made orange flowers bloom behind
Dasha's closed eyes. She squinted and rubbed her temples
and slowly cracked her eyes open. On the other side of the
small campfire she could see Adranath sitting across from
her, staring at her with a gentle smile. She sat upright
quickly and tensed.
"What have you done? Where am I?!" She demanded.
She was finished showing the eternal respect after the chaos
she had witnessed transpire at his command. The image of
his spells smashing through the landscape of Ilshenar during
the battle would haunt her dreams for a lifetime.
"I worried for you, young one. It took days for your
strength to return." Adranath said as if not hearing
her. "We will be complete again. We must be on our
way soon, the wait has been so long." He smiled and
stared at her.
Dasha sat silent for a moment, trying to make sense of
his words. She wasn't sure if the eternal was insane or
trying to manipulate her. "Tell me what you have done,
Adranath! To what consequence has your madness condemned
us? Where are we?" She tried to find some sign of understanding
in his eyes but they seemed vacant, as if he were in a dream.
"The mountains, Dasha. Do you not recognize the mountains?
Have they changed so much after all this time?" He
stood and looked around the majestic landscape. "All
this time..."
"I have never seen this place before." She spoke
slowly, unsure of her own words. This place did look familiar.
"This land... it reminds me of home. But this is some
mockery of our world. A poor imitation!" She stood
and walked to stand in front of him. Her hand held his shoulder
tightly and his gaze met hers. "Tell me what has happened
here! Where is our homeland? How did you bring the Juka..."
"The Juka!" His eyes widened and he grasped her
hand. "The time has come, Dasha. I have been watching
for so long and the time has come again. Our chance to restore
the balance begins anew!"
"The balance?" Her heart softened slightly at
his words. "Only days ago your thirst for vengence
consumed you, now you again find hope for the balance?"
"Days?" His face wrinkled in confusion. "I
have had... centuries... you do not know! My child... you
do not know... gone for countless centuries. The destruction
averted... sit, child. Sit." He took her hand and led
her back to the fire. "You must be told."
She slowly lowered to the ground and relaxed. The eternal's
behavior concerned her deeply. "What must I be told?"
"You have been lost, Dasha. You were taken from time.
You and the entire Juka fortress, all taken in an instant.
Pulled from history! It was Exodus!"
"But I saw you from the fortress... you were casting
your spells and then everything was lost in light."
Her memory strained to recall the event fully from the madness
that had transpired around her.
Exodus! Do something to give us time, sorcerer!
The insanity of Adranath's explanation suddenly began to
make a cold sense to her. This was home. The mountains had
dulled over time and the landscape had shifted. New, strange
plant life flourished where fire and explosions of magic
had been days before. But... it was more than days, wasn't
it?
"How long?" Dasha crossed her arms and felt a
chill in her body. Her world was now gone, the magics once
controlled by her people had faded and changed. No wonder
her spells felt weak. Her home was now hopelessly lost in
history. "How long have I truly been away?"
"Thousands of years... so very... very long..."
He stared into space as if reliving every moment of the
wait. "For so long I have been watching... and now
the time has come."
"You have... you could not have been waiting for this
long! How?!"
"You forget the very nature of an eternal, child?"
Adranath smiled gently. "I became the watcher. The
responsibility was mine. I... I had to atone for... what
I had done..." His smile faded into dread. "Such
madness... was I really so foolish, Dasha?"
"Please... Adranath..." She held him gently by
the shoulders and spoke in soft tones, "where are the
Meer? Surely our race did not allow oblivion to take us?
What happened after I... after I was gone?"
"The dreams came." A tear rolled from his eye.
"Such destruction I caused... everything was gone.
The Juka, the fortress, the Meer... we dreamt of our end,
yet... we were spared from it. In the dreams I... I killed
everyone. Everyone dead because of my sickening vengenace!"
He calmed himself, remembering the carnage had been reduced
to a displaced memory. "That was when we knew. We knew
what Exodus had done. The Juka, stolen away in time to keep
the balance tilted! You... stolen away."
She could not bring herself to raise her voice to the old
one again; his pain at witnessing the slaughter of two races
in his dreams for thousands of years was enough punishment.
It seemed he had been spared from his own crime by Exodus'
plot. "But the Meer... what became of our people, Adranath?
Are we the last of our race?"
"The time has come!" He stood quickly and smiled
once more. "Come, come child! You have returned to
us and now the time of the awakening is at hand!"
He took her hand and helped her rise and immediately began
walking away at a brisk pace. With nothing else to guide
her actions in this strange place, she followed him, unsure
of what awaited her. They walked in silence for nearly an
hour until they reached the base of the mountains, a small
clearing in the grass not far away from the Juka fortress
she had barely escaped days earlier.
Adranath moved his hands in complicated arcs and small
motes of light fell from him like dust. He clapped his hands
together and the lights fell to the ground and swirled together
forming one bright point. The light spread along the ground
and formed the shape of a square stone platform before it
faded. A platform of polished wood with what seemed to be
blink runes was fitted into the top of the neatly carved
rock.
"Come." Adranath offered Dasha his hand, which
she suspiciously took. Together they stepped onto the wooden
platform and vanished. When they reappeared Dasha could
see that they were in some sort of crypt. Tombs in rows
stretched on from one end of the massive chamber to the
other with small dots of torchlight burning throughout.
It was obvious Meer had built this place, but she had never
seen it before.
"What is this place? These are not death tombs, Adranath."
"No, child. It was the only way we could follow. The
sleep of eternity holds the Meer here." He walked through
the chamber to a tomb whose lid had not been sealed. "But
someone had to stay. Someone had to watch for the Juka."
He turned to her. "The duty was mine. After what I
had done... what I had once done and was undone... I had
to atone."
"You have been watching and waiting... for thousands
of years?!" She understood the madness that now seemed
to plague the old eternal. After centuries and centuries
of seclusion in this land he had lost a bit of his composure.
Eternals would exist forever but in solitude even an immortal
mind had to suffer over such a great expanse of time.
"The Meer gave up their home so that we could wait
for the time when the struggle for balance could begin anew.
The fortress has returned. The Juka have returned. You,
my child, you have returned." He turned in a full circle,
taking in the hundreds of tombs that had waited for him
for endless centuries. His task was now complete. "Now
rise, my people! Rise and continue the fight!"
He slammed his staff down onto the floor and held his hand
aloft. A bright blue light shot forth from his fingertips
and enveloped the entire room in its glow. Dasha shielded
her eyes slightly and looked back and forth as the light
bathed every surface and faded. At first it was imperceptible
but bit-by-bit the sounds of movement could be heard. Beside
her, a tomb cracked open and the lid drifted aside. Another
eternal rose from the sarcophagus and turned to meet her
gaze.
"Dasha! Upon awakening I could have hoped to see nothing
so wonderful as the sight of you returned to your people!"
Dasha could only stare in amazement. The entire race had
slept for centuries here so that they may once again devote
themselves to the balance. All was not lost.
"Watcher, you have done well." The eternal said
to Adranath. "Your devotion has saved us all and we
are in your debt."
Adranath turned to Dasha, the look of a frightened child
on his face. "I... am I forgiven, Dasha? After all
I have done, all that I would have done... all of this that
has occurred... I can be the only one to blame. Had I not
been such a hasty fool in that time, we would not have had
to bring ourselves to this new world. After all this time...
have I been redeemed?"
She smiled and took his hand gently. "You once told
me that wisdom accepts the inevitability of change."
One by one, the tombs opened and an entire race awoke from
their sleep.
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