![]() 1. NostalgiaA Chapter by Kianna![]() It was one of the nights, Brooke couldn't escape the haunting question. Why did she leave? Why did Mom leave without even a goodbye. All that's left is is frozen smile in a frame and her old diary.![]() CLING!
Brooke’s combat boots skidded against the icy ground as she stepped back. She
inhaled and the frosty air cooled the blood running wild in her veins. She
popped her knuckles, loosening her grip on the sword’s hilt, and rolled her
shoulders so that they stayed flexibly round. She reminded herself to relax as tension began to weigh her down. She did not want to lose again. She wanted to show the
man who’d taken time from his solitude, which he held precious, that it had not
gone to waste. Snow fell
on the granite battlefield and the flakes vanished against raw, wet breezes
that whipped past Brooke’s cheekbones, set high upon her face. She pointed her
long blade in the direction of her opponent’s, silent, yet contemplative eyes,
who she called her master. She flicked her dark, wispy bangs aside to glance
at her master’s stance, searching for ways to counter him before they would meet by
swords again. She
groaned to see his blade jabbed in the ground. He was leaning against the
pommel of his sword as if leisurely leaning against a bar table. He tapped his
foot and arched his thick brows. His eyes displayed a stern impatience that aggravated
Brooke. She sprung at him and raised her sword to break the arrogant stance,
but he blocked her. Brooke didn’t even see him lift the sword from the ground.
She didn’t see a muscle move. A bull can’t charge at a crane, Brooke mused, and
she had to relax. No matter how bulky her master was, he was always fluid with
his movements. Master
yawned and pushed her back. This did not keep her down. She never stayed down
for long, and she faced her Master, returning to basic stance. Her resilience
kept her warm and standing tall like the string of a strong bow. The two
swords sung a reverberating tune as they continuously clashed together, singing
the collision of impregnable energies. Her deflections had improved, she
noticed. Usually, she had trouble keeping up with her master, leaving the field
with multiple wounds. Now she deflected every one of his strikes. Master raised his sword. Brooke sank into her
rooted leg, twisted her waist to the right, and she stopped him by her blade
ridge. She smirked as her blade ducked below her master’s, and she used the
back of the sword, sliding it against the back of her master’s sword, to fling
it across the field. She sliced the sleeve of his cloak, teasing him, drawing
on the shock of the comeback. He stepped back this time, and tripped on his own
big feet. She pointed her sword to the tip of his bulbous nose and a victorious
grin carved its way between her burning cheeks. “Looks like I have won,” said
Brooke as she panted. A
mischievous grin engraved into his rigid, brown beard. He swiped his legs below
hers and tripped her. He used the small opportunity to scuttle to his sword,
grab it, and stretch back to Brooke, already pointing it towards her nose. Brooke’s
elbows scraped against the ground as she sat up and scowled. His husky voice
towered over her, “Looks can be deceiving.” Brooke pursed
her lips as he offered a hand. Brooke laid her small fingers into his huge
palm. She stood and swatted away snow and rock dust off her tights. She knitted
her light brows together, propped her hands on her hips, and gave him a
dramatic look of betrayal. “Rogue!” she yelled, “You cheated!” The words caught in her coarse throat. Just
when she thought she had him this time…How was she supposed to enter the
academy, after nine years, still unable to beat her master? How was she
supposed to fight to protect anyone if she had so much trouble protecting
herself? Rogue
ignored her and walked over to the empty tree stump by his cottage house. He
grabbed his beer and chugged it down. Brooke
shivered and hugged herself, finally realizing how cold it was to be wearing a
half-sleeved top. She regretted letting Lucy borrow her longer sleeved shirt.
It probably had her perfume all over it. Brooke sneezed. Her
master removed his cloak from his large shoulders and wrapped it around her
arms. “Catching a cold isn’t a teen thing is it?” he joked. Brooke
rolled her eyes. “FYI, this is the only thing I’ve got to wear that doesn’t
have some kind of perfume I don’t like on it,” she ranted. “My dad won’t buy me
any new clothes. We’ve got to save money, says Mary. Not what she says when she
buys these million dollar clothes, shoes, and plastic surgery.” “What
about her children?” Brooke stared at the
darkened sky and the snow topped mountains reaching towards it. “If Mary
doesn't treat me like crap, then they take her place.” Brooke shook her head and
glared at Rogue. “What was the tripping thing all about?” she griped. Rogue shrugged.
“We’re sparring, were we not?” He paused, thinking, and said, “The sword is not
my only weapon in combat, remember that, but you put up a tough fight and have
come a long way; I’m very proud of you and I think you’ll do fine at the
academy.” Brooke took in the encouraging words and nodded. “Next time, we’ll focus on your martial arts, okay?” She
smirked. “Next time, I’ll kick your butt; just you wait!” Rogue
laughed as he ruffled Brooke’s hair as if she were a bouncy puppy. “Can’t wait
to see that, my growing pupil.” He finished the last of his beer, crushed the
can, and tossed it away. He belched, and Brooke laughed as the crass sound
echoed into the mountains and disturbed the ravens. Rogue tugged the end of his
beard. “When are you entering the academy anyways?” Brooke
mashed her lips together and looked away shyly. “I don’t know.” “Can’t
hesitate forever, Brooke.” “I know,”
she muttered. She didn’t mean to hesitate, but becoming a guardian for the
royal family was an intimidating job. What if she didn’t have the right skills?
No, she must not doubt her abilities, she reminded herself, but still… “You’re
almost twenty years old now, you can’t stay under your father’s roof forever,
and-” “I sent
in the form already, Rogue!” she exclaimed.
Rogue
cocked his head to the side and smiled. “Oh really?” “I’m
waiting for the confirmation for my audition.” “Well,
only thing left to do is hope you get it.” Brooke returned
his smile. She removed the cloak, gave it to Rogue, and tucked her sword in its
sheath hooked to her belt. “I have to go; thanks for the session.” She hurried
out of the rocky path from Rogue’s cottage and followed the whispers of the
Lavender Stream through the small forest into the kingdom walls. Snow and time
fought against her. Dad’s house rested in the Far East on the rural side of the
kingdom. Brooke thought about catching a bus,
but she didn’t have any money on her. Besides, Brooke enjoyed running. She
passed townhouse neighborhoods, the gas station, the diner, the movie theater,
and other buildings that slowly trundled into hills and plains. The moon
shined golden and bright on the slanted shingles of Dad’s house. Brooke hoped he
wouldn’t scold her about her broken curfew. He was always concerned about her
when it came to her guardianship training, and she managed to break the curfew
three nights in a row lately. She was sure Dad had something to say- him or Mary. She
walked over the little, cement bridge and stopped in front of the mailbox. She
opened it and flipped through teen magazines, bills, and…her confirmation
letter! She had to have the audition and do well to get into the academy. Brooke
knocked on the door, hating every reason Mary came up with not to give her a
key. Fannie answered the door, smiling fading and shoulders slumping at the sight of Brooke. “Aw
man, I thought it was someone I wanted to see.” Brooke pushed past her,
ignoring the insult. No one was in the living room. “I
assume Lucy and Mary are getting their face lifts?” Fannie
folded her arms. “Ha ha, they’re in the dining room; Mom and your dad
want to see you.” She went
down the hall to the dining room. The house smelled like burnt baked chicken.
Mary had probably cooked. Dad, Lucy, and Mary sat in the wooden chairs around
the long, square table. Mary and Dad turned away from each other. Mary’s big
nose crinkled looking like a cartoon-illustrated witch. “Oh Brooklyn, please,
aren’t you hungry?” Brooke saw
the full plate next to Lucy. A dark, lump of meat she was sure was the chicken,
a glop of grey mashed potatoes, and slimy green peas made Brooke lose her
appetite. “No thanks, I’m not ready to die yet,” she replied. Mary
narrowed her eyes at Brooke. Dad sighed. “Can you at least be difficult sitting
down, Brooklyn?” Brooke sat beside Lucy, but she wasn’t going to touch the
plate. Dad never
said Brooke’s whole name unless something was important. She hoped it was news
that Mary and him would be breaking up and she and her daughters would have to
move far, far away. “So,
how’s that old perv in the mountains? Rock was his name?” asked Lucy, waking
Brooke out of her blissful thoughts. Brooke frowned at the air headed blonde. “His name
is Rogue, and he’s not old and perverted like your boyfriends. He’s my
friend and one of the best adults I see all day.” Lucy crossed her arms and
stuck her tongue at her. “Please don't, we can only guess where that's been.” “Enough!”
commanded Mary, her voice light and firm. Her eyes softened and she turned to
Dad, smiling as if she’d found a new gold watch she loved collecting. “Oh dear,
tell her for me I’m so excited!” exclaimed Mary as she rubbed her nose against
Dad’s nose. He
signaled Brooke to come and she approached him. “Brooklyn, I want you to look
at me, okay?” She obeyed under the firmness in his voice. “How would you feel
about me remarrying?” The word
sent a shattering ring through her ears. She asked with the little hope she
had, knowing there was only one person he planned to remarry. “To who?” Mary
revealed a diamond ring wrapped around her finger. Her bony, ugly, marriage
finger. “Who do you think?” Mary kissed Dad and Brooke stood there frozen, not
sure how to react. No matter how she tried to rearrange the picture, it was all
the same. Dad loved Mary as an abandoned dog loved his savior. Mary fed Dad
with love, for his money. Even so, it seemed he wagged his tail at her
happiness. And no matter how Brooke rearranged the situation, this wasn’t
right! Mary- her mother and her horrible daughters an official part of her
family? Brooke
scowled and replied, “I don’t like it.” Her honest words chilled the room. Mary
pretended to cry and wailed about how unwelcome she felt. Brooke rolled her
eyes and walked away. Dad called her name, but she refused to listen. She went to her room and slammed the door behind her. She fell
on the bed, set the envelope on the end table, and faced the framed picture of
how her real family used to be. She gave it a nostalgic smile. Her mother’s
blue eyes smiled back at her. Then, the unanswered question began to bother
Brooke again. Why did she leave? Brooke remembered that one night, snuggled
close to her mother, and then gone when she woke up. She had searched the house
and her father never responded to the question. Well, he did, with tears of his
own, but that didn’t help. Brooke opened her closet to hang up her clothes and stash
her sword. All her sparring gear lay in a jumble on the closet floor. Things
she used when she was younger and first picked up the sword, first decided to
train for the academy to become a guardian and protect the royal family. She
decided this to have a goal, something to work for, and something to make her
come to peace with her mother’s absence. As Brooke searched for a gown to put on after her shower,
she spotted a cardboard box in the corner. Brooke noticed this box before, but
didn’t mess with it. Probably had useless junk, or worse, things Mom left
behind. A book sticking out caught her eye. Cursive writing stretched across
the tattered cover spelling, Diary of Rain Sevede. That was her mother's name. Her eyes tightened as she grasped the book. She picked up the book and
flipped through the pages, withered with age. A knock at the door startled her. She set the book down as
gently as she would set a glass vase down and opened the door. Dad leaned in
the arch. “Hey, Brooke, look, I know Mary and the girls can be a handful sometimes
and-” Dad peered over Brooke’s head and she turned to see what caught his
attention. “What’s that?” “I didn’t know we kept Mom’s diary.” His eyes widened and
he rushed over to the book. He picked it up and stared at the cover. Brooke was
afraid he’d sulk after seeing the thing. That’s what he usually did when he
found Mom’s possessions. “Uh well, I’d been searching for this-” “I found it in the closet,” answered Brooke before he
asked. Brooke had expected to read the diary; maybe it would have
the reason why she left. Mom had always been an interesting figure, a
mysterious figure too. Dad started leaving with the book. “I want to read some
of it!” she exclaimed. Dad shook his head. “No, Brooklyn.” There her full name was
again. The diary was indeed of great importance. It was an item the person missing
in their lives wrote in, perhaps inputting answers that both Brooke and Dad had
wondered when Mom dwelled within her mysteries. Brooke crossed her arms and studied her father’s blank expression,
something she hadn’t seen since her mom left. “Maybe she….” His light brows furrowed against his creasing forehead and
he yelled with a mix of anger and sadness, “She’s gone, Brooklyn!” Brooke stepped back and observed her dad’s mood change.
Brooke expected the reaction, but not like this. The man loved and hated his
wife. He loved her because she made him happy and hated her because she left
without a simple goodbye. Brooke lowered her head and Dad’s face loosened. He
pulled Brooke into a hug and said, “She’s gone, and there’s nothing we can do
about it.” “I know,” said Brooke, the only thing she could say. She
hadn’t taken Mom’s disappearance so harsh until Mary came along. She released all
her outbursts on the battlefield with Rogue. “I know what you mean, Dad.” Brooke ushered her dad out. He left with the book. She
decided to drop it. Brooke swiped up her letter and ripped it open. One good
thing…her audition was in five days. © 2013 KiannaAuthor's Note
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Added on July 1, 2013Last Updated on July 9, 2013 Tags: Kianna Taylor, Kianna, Taylor, God, love, song, fantasy, book, elves, dark, romance, princess, king, queen, kingdom, epic fantasy, urban fantasy, epic, urban, young adult, occult, magic, depression Song of the Keeper's Sword
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By KiannaAuthor![]() KiannaHouston, TXAboutHello. Hmm, about me. I am a pre-nursing student hoping to become a psychiatric nurse and work with mental health patients all day. Eventually, I want to establish my own clinic. Besides writing fanta.. more..Writing
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