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Johnathans story (standard:fantasy, 3119 words) | |||
Author: Mark Tival | Added: Sep 20 2007 | Views/Reads: 3151/2130 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
a magician is looking to fullfill his prophesy, this is only the first few pages but I want to what you think of it | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story of the noise that the man had heard from the edge of town was issuing from. Turning his head he saw a sign, most of the words long ago lost to the sun and the many sand storms that tore through the deserts killing those foolish enough to be out in them. The man however could make out enough of the letters to tell him what the building was. Ignoring the staring looks of the people who surrounded him he turned right and started walking towards the tavern his foot falls sounding dryly in the evening air leaving boot marks on the ground in dented into the stony road of compacted sand that passed for a road in the town. The man walked up to the door taking in the deep knots of the old splintered wood worn deep by the winds. He put his hand to the door and walked in. Bright light met him as he walked into the room. It was small and lit brightly by three kerosene lamps burning dirtily on a shelf behind the bar. Around him people sat, some playing cards, all drinking, huddled in small groups perched on rotting chairs being eaten away by wood lice. All noise in the bar ceased as the man walked in every pair of eyes falling upon the stranger as he stood in the door way the quickly falling night a collage behind him making him seem even more intimidating. Unfazed the man met the eyes of every man in the bar before turning to look at the barman himself. He stood behind a long plank of wood that obviously played the role of bar. It stood about waist height to the man with dirty glasses encrusted with dirt on them. Behind the barman stood another shelf slightly lower than the one on which the lamps stood belching their poison into the air sat the few drinks the bar had to offer. Lined up like half dead soldiers most of them were half or more empty their amber and clear liquid seeming to have eaten slightly into the glass, which held it. The man recognised the amber liquid as Sien, a drink made from what ever liquid and fermentable oat was available. The man stepped down onto the floor his boots making soft clunking noises as they hit the floor, cut out from the upper layer of sand and lined with straw and devils grass. He carried on walking between the tables where the people sat gazing unabashedly at him. Nobody made a move in the room as the man came to the bar. He finally came to rest his feet touching, but only just, the wood his hands resting upon its dirtied surface. The bartender looked at him through deep brown eyes framed by deep lined deepened most likely by the sun. He allowed his eyes to take in the man standing in front of him. Medium height with black hair that fell in messy long waves that fell down almost to his shoulders. His face was a long handsome face a deep-sunned brown. A few days worth of travelling stubble lined his jaw. Instead of diminishing his looks, it simply enhanced them. His deep brown eyes caught the barman's and for a second the barman felt them piercing them. A suspicion took root in his mind and he stored it away for later. The man stood silent looking at him as if waiting for some thing. Finally the barman spoke, ‘what you be wanting?' He asked his voice as deep and powerful as the man standing opposite him expected it to be. A voice deepened and hardened by years working in the throbbing sun. The man answered, ‘I'll have what they have' He said indicating over his shoulder to the small groups of people sat behind him, their eyes still on him. His voice was fairly soft, not high nor low, yet it carried behind it a power that the barman wouldn't quite put his finger on. The bartender turned to get the drink picking out one of his finer liqueurs from a bottle that stood to the left of the row of bottles. One he saved only for special occasion, hence it was still more than half full. One of the men sitting down stood up his eyes never leaving the man and left the bar shooting the bartender a look of disgust as he reached the door. As if reading the barman's eyes the man spoke, ‘Ignore his look he'll come back another night' The barman shook his head in surprise at how the man had known. Still the thought wiggled in his mind. Ignoring it the barman opened the bottle and poured the man a measure of the pale amber liquid into one of the cleaner glasses. Placing it carefully in front of the man he spoke, ‘Two copper pieces...please,' He hurried the last word as if mentally scolding himself for forgetting it. The man said nothing simply smiled and knocked the drink back in one go, his face giving no indication as to the taste of the drink. Then he reached for a small pouch that hung to the left side of his hip. He pulled out a small bundle of coins and counted the correct amount and placed them in the barman's out stretched hand. The man took the pieces and put them under the bar into a small box that he carefully unlocked and locked with a small delicate key with the rest of the coins making a small metallic chinking noise as they hit the small pile that lay in the box. Turning his head back to the man the bartender looked at the man again wondering to himself about him. The man however had paid him, in gold no less so to his mind he had no choice. The man stood at the bar taking in the smells and sounds of the bar (the others in the bar having long gone back to their games and idle bitching of the day). He was tired he figured to himself. Too tired to do what needed to be done. He would do it in the morning. He placed his glass down in the greasy work top of the bar and nodded the barman's attention. He walked over to the man, ‘What ye be wanting? A room by chance?' The words came out more a statement than a query. He had known people like the man standing in front of him. Part of him however wasn't so sure that he knew all if any of him at all. The man across the bar simply nodded. ‘Then I need to know your name sir if you please' The barman didn't and guessed quickly that the man opposite knew it as well. Behind the brown eyes lay knowledge far beyond anything the scraggily bunch of pricks and tobacco munchers who populated the town knew the bartender figured. The man answered any way, ‘If its of importance to you its Johnathan. My last name is my own' He words came form his mouth once again hinted at a power that few if any in the town had of ever would know. The bartender nodded his approval at the name and the mans tone. ‘Follow me if you please' He called into a small doorway that led off to what was obviously the kitchens, ‘Amy I'm going to show a man to his room look after the bar if it pleases you. In reply to the call a woman came out from the door. Johnathan guessed her to be no more than about twenty, her looks unsullied by the hardship that the desert took. As soon as she walked out the bar stood to attention in more ways than one. A few wolf whistles greeted her as well as she flicked her long golden hair in barely concealed amusement and happiness to be the object of so many men's desires. The barman clicked his tongue in annoyance at the impact her appearance caused. He ushered the man named Johnathan behind him towards some stairs that he'd passed by unnoticed when he had first walked in. The old stairs groaned worryingly underneath Johnathan's feet as he followed the head bobbing in time with its footsteps echoing off the small walls that enclosed them on either side. Darkness had fallen long ago, earlier just after he had stepped in the bar. The cool heat however was only just starting abate absorbed by the walls that were only just beginning to give it out again. In the darkness the candle that the bartender had taken from underneath the bar and lit to show him his way up the stairs barely reached the corners of the landing that they had come up onto. It was a short corridor with a low roof that enclosed the two men on all sides the walls being close to one another to allow for more space in the rooms when times were more prosperous. The candle light feebly reflected the dull unvarnished wood that laid the floor, worn thin by years of passing feet, the owners to poor to have the money to have then refitted. Down the middle of the corridor the floor sagged a little a trick of the mind the truth being that the feet that had passed over the floorboards had worn the middle lower than the rest. The candle light hid most of this from the mans eyes casting thicker darker shadows than it banished. Long shadows looking like daemons played in the flicker of the candle flame a, macabre dance between the life of shadows and light. The man walked following the barman along the short landing to a door at the end of the corridor barely visible in the gloom of the night. The man pulled out a short rusty key that may have, at one time, been a handsome brass but the years had worked their evil game and the shine was lost to the confines of time. Putting it into the key hole he turned it slowly as if it took some effort. A grating sound cut through the relative quiet of the corridor, the rest of the people of the bar now too far drunk to make much noise. Soon, Johnathan, guessed they would need to go home, the early rise of the next day dragging them out of their happiness like a fish out of its home. The need to scrape a meagre life from the hard sand and animals called them more fiercely than any drink could ever do. Them man however wasn't bothered with the toils of normal men, their short struggles against the advancing death meaning nothing to him. Same as time he guessed to himself. The barman opened the door and stood aside to allow Johnathan to see the room. It was small with greasy windows that would not give in much light in the day and now at night which cut out any light that might have been shining. In the corner under the window an obvious attempt to make the room look nicer sat and old bed, the materes stained and in places torn from the spring wires which glimmered dully beneath the candle light. A worn wooden side table with a single solitary candle on it sat lonely by the bed. The barman muttered some thing that may have been a pleasant night but Johnathan's ears were not on him and the words reached his ears having no meaning. He felt the key being pressed into his hand and the hollow sounds of the door being closed behind him and the deep chunky sounds of the man making his way back down the stairs to relieve the woman of her duties and send her back to the kitchens. Johnathan turned to the door and placed his hand on the small round handle and muttered briefly. A spell against those who would enter by force. The magic, small blue sparkles of life glittered before his eyes arranging themselves obediently around the door. The magician moved mover to the bed pulling off his jacket and placing it over a woodlice ridden chair that sat at the desk. He pulled off his shoes and fell on the bed. He had been walking for months, trying to find the town he was in now. Despite his excitement he was asleep before the last customer was displaced, some times indignantly, out onto the street. As his mind drifted off to lands no longer known by the people he was amongst he didn't hear the howling of the lone wolf, hunger growling in its belly making it brave enough to come into the town. Johnathan slept. The night moved on. Tweet
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