Xymound Haxxtone: A painful lingered life

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Ode to the Old Goat
Posts: 11
Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 3:39 am

Xymound Haxxtone: A painful lingered life

Unread post by Ode to the Old Goat »

Xymound Haxxtone: A painful lingered life

The old man always limped, as did he now limp down the road following his compatriots. He frowned in a sad melancholy way. Being a new and unknown soldier to this company, curiosity had drawn one of them to earlier ask him about his story...

She was young, already a leader, quick of both feet and wit, with an inner fire that burned like the brightest star.

He thought, 'My story, what could I tell her???'

'What could I tell her... that would not make her spirit ache and prematurely old, that would not force burning tears to mar her young life'

There was the pain, it haunted him. His constant companion of the proceeding decades. It nearly consumed him at times.

There were his sorrowful deep regrets. His heartaches of lost opportunities and missed choices that would have made better his now dismal existence. His what if's that distracted him from the now.

There was the few remaining memories, the unforgotten past. His ancient history was a fortress locked away since his terrible head injury of youth. He knew the sound a dying horse or a man makes as it's life spills into the battlefield, so too of a thousand men and a company of cavalry, he knew the inner coldness that grows when you have many times followed the order for war or given the drummed signal to begin in war, to be covered in the blood of men whom fought only for the right to live another day and a hot meal from the chow line they shuffled down without cheer or words to explain the horrifying events experienced. The memories he cherished were too few and the memories indescribable far too many.

There were his troubling fears of no future existence. His deep seated desires to finally be rid of the crippling pain, yet over burdened with the foreboding wish to avoid the final empty and hollow end inside the wall that he knew was near to come. The nothing, scared him more than the worst pains.

There was the pain, it haunted him. His constant companion of the proceeding decades. It consumed him at times.

'What could he tell her of his life?'

The old man stumbled in his plodding march, his outdated armor a heavy burden and contrast to those of the youthful company.

He pulls out his flute to play a ancient song with a sad melody about a young man, a vigilante whom murdered war raiders that had burned a village's wheat stores before winter and stolen the town's daughters to be slaves. He is to be hung from a bridge post. A drum sounds. The young man feels the taut hangman's line snap as he falls. He swims through the river as arrows rain about him. The rough current carries him quickly away from the pursuers, but is itself a danger. At last dragging his sodden body from the watery grip, he runs as a man newly born with his endurance and strength unequaled. For days he runs to familiar and more friendly lands. This finally sees him return in glory, to run across lush fields of his own homestead. His wife and children await him on the front porch. He runs and she rushes forward. He runs as his lungs fill with joyful air overflowing, she runs arms outstretched weeping for his return. He runs and reaches for at last to touch his love again... As the plank falls into the rushing river below, he dangles, kicking as if running for his final moments. With little word those foreign soldiers that captured him turn and march down the road toward dinner.

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Last edited by Ode to the Old Goat on Thu Nov 28, 2013 12:36 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Pythagoreans celebrate sunrise - Musica universalis
Ode to the Old Goat
Posts: 11
Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 3:39 am

Re: Xymound Haxxtone: A painful lingered life

Unread post by Ode to the Old Goat »

In the way of old men, he did not seek to tell his tale.

He felt no gain from the retelling of old glory or stories from the past. His regrets were far too much of a weight to think others might wish to know such.

Sitting alone on a bench, he stared out toward the street. The passersby and hustle-n-bustlers, going to and fro on their daily path. He did not feel their pace, a rich lady in furs tosses a coin at his feet to impress those near her with false generosity, hardly before it stops spinning the coin is snatched by a scrambling hollow bellied youth. The old man paid them no mind.

His pain it wracked his mind it made his fingers clinch at his thigh as it spasmed.

As his vision clears he notices the hand of the apothecary's assistant on his shoulder. She has come to tell him his order is ready and with the most gentle and soothing touch has generously eased the burden of his pain for the moment. He is a regular customer, far to regular of this place of business. She knows that look in his eyes and willing to aid without expecting payment except to see the old man's weak smile again and hope he might play them a song before he goes away with his packages of balms and ointment jostling in time to his awkward limping march.

Today there is no song for the girl and her boss, his finger joints far to swollen and sore to do justice for what he knows real music should be.

He stumbles away knowing how to respond when next asked about his life.
Pythagoreans celebrate sunrise - Musica universalis
Ode to the Old Goat
Posts: 11
Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2013 3:39 am

Re: Xymound Haxxtone: A painful lingered life

Unread post by Ode to the Old Goat »

When he marches along with the company and is asked about his story.

"Fellas it is a story of two parts that I will tell. I'll sing to you of how it should have been and then of how it is. Both and neither are full and true, and you'll have to pick which you prefer to be the history for you"

He brings up a old styled instrument part harp and part lute, it is perfectly tuned with each note played it is clear the item has some enchantment to be so harmoniously in pitch with the world about.

The story he relates is one of a young man, a foreign lad just a water bearer in service to a mighty army, who longs to throw off his lowly status and become a soldier of the Queen. The water boy is harassed and hounded by the troops as someone second class, not fit to be a part of the company and fight as a man. The boy is to provide water to a detachment of soldiers on a dangerous scouting mission, when the assignment goes badly and the mission is near to fail which will result in the entire army being ambushed and destroyed the scouts fight hard to escape but their route leads them away from the main army.

The water boy seeing that all will be lost if both the scouting mission falls and the army is routed, snatches up a signal horn from a fallen soldier. The lad carries the horn through the dangerous battle into the enemy lines and struggles to reach the top of a barren hilltop. Enemy troops finally realize the lad's plan and begin to pursue, and attack with arrows, as they cannot let the youth warn the approaching army of the trap. An arrow pierces the water boy's shoulder and he falls, but with unmeasured courage and dedication he rises again to run toward the partial cover of a few scattered boulders.

Although wounded and at risk from his hilltop location he begins to sound the signal horn, he plays it loud and strong to warn his friendly army of the threat. As he blows the horn he is hit again with arrows and time and time again he rises to play the warning blasts, only to be felled again with new painful and deadly wounds. The horn blasts signals weaken and grows weaker as the boy does finally succumb to the fresh barrage of arrows, until only silence reaches the army which no longer hears from the horn.

When after days of bloody battle the lad's army is victorious and his body discovered, it is carried back to his city a hero. The Queen herself commands that a statue be raised for the youths heroic deeds.

'Huzza!" goes the crowd of listening soldiers for such a gallant tale.

The second story the old man tells is one of a young man, he is a signal drummer for an army, he awakes from a lingering near death battle wound to his head and other life threatening injuries as well. His wounds so grave, with so many other wounded in need and healing too scarce to aid such an unfortunate man, he goes without assistance, healing, or grieving.

But, he does not die; his wounds heal with time but not fully or without pain, although he is virtually unknown and forgotten with so few remaining compatriots alive after their army's defeat. His past is an empty parchment, except a few tales the other surviving soldiers know of him. Even those stories of himself sound like they talk of some other person unmet. He fights on into his future with no past, he serves in many duties and wars seeing the fall of many lands, never finding a chance of glory or a hero's death.

When as finally an old man the armies will no longer take him on campaigns, he stays alone in the city to die in his sleep, forgotten, painful, alone, and unhonered.

In the silence of the crowd full of blank faces and eyes that cast aside, the old man swings his horn to his lips and signals for an "All Charge and Rally!!!" even though then just stand beside a dusty road.

An officer notices them not in the formation and barks and order to march, the troops and old man plod forward toward the future.
Pythagoreans celebrate sunrise - Musica universalis
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