
(( Just writing out bits of Tiergan's backstory. Props to Zaius for all the help he gave me in finally getting some of this down.))
“My name's Alan.â€
“I don't care what your name is.â€
For what felt like the fourth time, the hyur boy sitting across from him in the musty, dark cell, tried to talk to Tiergan. The miqo'te was having none of it. He scowled into the shadows of their tiny shared prison, ears pinned back against the sides of his skull in anger, hands balled into fists. What was the point of getting to know each other? Sooner or later they'd both be marched back out to the mines. The taskmasters would whip you for so much as uttering a word there. Support systems were what helped spark rebellion - it wouldn't do to have slaves bond and form friendships.
"Are sure you don't want to talk?"
"I'm sure."
The hyur was slim, but not starved, with reddish brown hair and earth-colored eyes. All the same, he didn't have the meat on him to make it as slave labor. He'd probably be dead inside of a few months. Tiergan himself, on the other hand? He just hoped someone was stupid enough to give him a pickaxe. His old master had learned that lesson when he'd nearly killed two of the taskmasters assigned to watch the excavation. That thought brought a grim, dark smile to Tiergan's face. At only thirteen, he'd almost taken two lives, and those actions had brought him some of the greatest satisfaction and release he'd known.
"Is something...good?" Alan tried again, hesitantly. Tiergan glared, growling low in his throat. The other shrank back, his face taking on an expression of fear. The hyur couldn't have been much older, or younger, than Tiergan himself. But he didn't look weathered. A fresh catch?
"Just remembering something. Before I woke up here," Tiergan allowed, keeping his voice low. It was impossible to tell if there were guards waiting just outside the cell, and the last thing he wanted was to get beaten because the other boy wouldn't shut up.
"I was on the streets, looking for my older sister," Alan said, shifting a bit closer despite Tiergan's baleful glare. "Something hit me on the back of the head and then...I woke up here." The youth let out a soft helpless sound, like a muted whimper. "I don't know what to do."
“There's nothing you can do. If you're here, then you're a slave. No way out except through Thal's door.†The miqo'te replied, his tone flat and somewhat cold. At the wounded, horrified expression on Alan's face however, Tiergan averted his gaze, his voice softening a fraction. “You can survive though – if you're smart. And if you live long enough, maybe there's a chance your family might find you. Buy you back.â€
Alan sniffled, lowering his head as he nodded. Tiergan felt a sharp pang in his chest as he thought of elder sister the hyur mentioned having - of family waiting somewhere out there, looking for the boy, worried about him...
What would it be like to have that? To have family searching desperately outside this prison for him? Would he have been rescued by now? Would they even know he was here?
Tiergan snapped his eyes shut, forcing the feelings of sadness and yearning from his chest. When the miqo'te finally managed to look up again, Alan continued to sit in stunned silence, eyes bright with shock and unshed tears of panic. Tiergan knew that look well. He'd seen it hundreds of times on the faces of countless other children: their expressions a soundless cry to the gods, asking why they'd abandoned here, what they'd done to deserve this...
When the tears finally came, streaming down the young hyur's face, Tiergan finally felt the cold, cruelty barricading his heart begin to wither. He started to rise, reaching out a hand, ready to give the other boy some measure of comfort. There were things the hyur needed to know if he wanted to live, things that Alan had to do if he wanted to survive and avoid the lash.
Suddenly, the door to the cell swung open, firelight cutting a swath of gold and crimson down the center of the room. A towering highlander male, silhouetted by the light behind him, threw something down into the center of the space. It's razor-sharp edge gleamed like a jewel illuminated by flames.
A dagger.
“One of you will get to leave here alive and become a gladiator, fighting for glory and fame on the bloodsands.†The highlander's voice was harsh and deep, edged with a gravelly indifference. Tiergan couldn't see the man's expression, but he knew from the way the man spoke and how he carried himself that it would not be kind. “The other will die here, rotting away to nothing. You'll have to decide for yourselves who is who.â€
The miqo'te froze still, his body locked in place as his eyes fixated on the open doorway and the hulking figure standing within it. The highlander was tall and powerfully built, but he was still just one man. One man who had just tossed two desperate teenage boys a sharp, bladed weapon. If Tiergan grabbed the dagger and moved fast enough, perhaps he could get in a quick strike at the man's legs and then Alan could--
A flash of steel caught Tiergan's eye and he turned his head just in time to see Alan barreling towards him with the knife. Tiergan barely managed to catch the hyur's wrist in time, diverting the blade's course away from his chest before the two boys collided into each other, tumbling to the ground. The dagger slipped from Alan's grasp in the fall and everything that came next was a frenzied blur of violence and adrenaline.
Tiergan's blood came rushing loud in his ears, his heart pounding in his chest like a wardrum sounding off his last moments. The children frantically traded blows, cracking knuckles against each other's bodies and faces, kicking, screaming, and clawing at each other in a frantic bid for dominance and survival. Then Tiergan felt something puncture into his side. Pain blossomed there like a poisoned flower and his entire world suddenly felt as though it were made of glass and fractured bone, every nerve aflame with mind-rending agony. Tiergan heard the highlander's voice resounding in his mind. Only one of them would leave the room alive. The other would die here. Alone. Forgotten.
A meaningless end to a meaningless life.
The miqo'te felt something within him snap. A potent, blinding rage swallowed him up, consuming every thought and feeling in a terrifying blaze of white-hot fury. He tackled Alan down, straddling him, slamming his fist against the side of the other boy's face again, and again, and again. The hyur child let out a hoarse, howling cry of desperation, but Tiergan silenced him, wrapping his hands around the other boy's neck, squeezing, strangling...
When the world finally went still and the heat of his rage finally died away, Tiergan pulled his shaking hands away from Alan's throat. The hyur was still and unmoving, his eyes fixed sightlessly to the ceiling, mouth open in a soundless scream of horror. The miqo'te looked downward at himself and saw the dagger plunged deep into his right side, Alan's hand clutching the hilt in a deathgrip. A rich, dark crimson was soaking into his tunic around the wound, life gradually draining away from him with every breath. Tiergan tried to take hold of the knife only to feel an overwhelming burst of pain push the breath from his lungs. He sank to the floor at Alan's side, the edges of his vision going dark, the scent of blood and steel heavy in the air.
Somewhere in the distance, he could hear someone speaking. A stranger asking another if the kitten was worth buying, worth saving.
As blackness finally shrouded out his vision, Tiergan heard the highlander male who'd presented the dagger chuckling softly, replying in that harsh, gravelly tone.
“Did you see his eyes? He's perfect.â€
“My name's Alan.â€
“I don't care what your name is.â€
For what felt like the fourth time, the hyur boy sitting across from him in the musty, dark cell, tried to talk to Tiergan. The miqo'te was having none of it. He scowled into the shadows of their tiny shared prison, ears pinned back against the sides of his skull in anger, hands balled into fists. What was the point of getting to know each other? Sooner or later they'd both be marched back out to the mines. The taskmasters would whip you for so much as uttering a word there. Support systems were what helped spark rebellion - it wouldn't do to have slaves bond and form friendships.
"Are sure you don't want to talk?"
"I'm sure."
The hyur was slim, but not starved, with reddish brown hair and earth-colored eyes. All the same, he didn't have the meat on him to make it as slave labor. He'd probably be dead inside of a few months. Tiergan himself, on the other hand? He just hoped someone was stupid enough to give him a pickaxe. His old master had learned that lesson when he'd nearly killed two of the taskmasters assigned to watch the excavation. That thought brought a grim, dark smile to Tiergan's face. At only thirteen, he'd almost taken two lives, and those actions had brought him some of the greatest satisfaction and release he'd known.
"Is something...good?" Alan tried again, hesitantly. Tiergan glared, growling low in his throat. The other shrank back, his face taking on an expression of fear. The hyur couldn't have been much older, or younger, than Tiergan himself. But he didn't look weathered. A fresh catch?
"Just remembering something. Before I woke up here," Tiergan allowed, keeping his voice low. It was impossible to tell if there were guards waiting just outside the cell, and the last thing he wanted was to get beaten because the other boy wouldn't shut up.
"I was on the streets, looking for my older sister," Alan said, shifting a bit closer despite Tiergan's baleful glare. "Something hit me on the back of the head and then...I woke up here." The youth let out a soft helpless sound, like a muted whimper. "I don't know what to do."
“There's nothing you can do. If you're here, then you're a slave. No way out except through Thal's door.†The miqo'te replied, his tone flat and somewhat cold. At the wounded, horrified expression on Alan's face however, Tiergan averted his gaze, his voice softening a fraction. “You can survive though – if you're smart. And if you live long enough, maybe there's a chance your family might find you. Buy you back.â€
Alan sniffled, lowering his head as he nodded. Tiergan felt a sharp pang in his chest as he thought of elder sister the hyur mentioned having - of family waiting somewhere out there, looking for the boy, worried about him...
What would it be like to have that? To have family searching desperately outside this prison for him? Would he have been rescued by now? Would they even know he was here?
Tiergan snapped his eyes shut, forcing the feelings of sadness and yearning from his chest. When the miqo'te finally managed to look up again, Alan continued to sit in stunned silence, eyes bright with shock and unshed tears of panic. Tiergan knew that look well. He'd seen it hundreds of times on the faces of countless other children: their expressions a soundless cry to the gods, asking why they'd abandoned here, what they'd done to deserve this...
When the tears finally came, streaming down the young hyur's face, Tiergan finally felt the cold, cruelty barricading his heart begin to wither. He started to rise, reaching out a hand, ready to give the other boy some measure of comfort. There were things the hyur needed to know if he wanted to live, things that Alan had to do if he wanted to survive and avoid the lash.
Suddenly, the door to the cell swung open, firelight cutting a swath of gold and crimson down the center of the room. A towering highlander male, silhouetted by the light behind him, threw something down into the center of the space. It's razor-sharp edge gleamed like a jewel illuminated by flames.
A dagger.
“One of you will get to leave here alive and become a gladiator, fighting for glory and fame on the bloodsands.†The highlander's voice was harsh and deep, edged with a gravelly indifference. Tiergan couldn't see the man's expression, but he knew from the way the man spoke and how he carried himself that it would not be kind. “The other will die here, rotting away to nothing. You'll have to decide for yourselves who is who.â€
The miqo'te froze still, his body locked in place as his eyes fixated on the open doorway and the hulking figure standing within it. The highlander was tall and powerfully built, but he was still just one man. One man who had just tossed two desperate teenage boys a sharp, bladed weapon. If Tiergan grabbed the dagger and moved fast enough, perhaps he could get in a quick strike at the man's legs and then Alan could--
A flash of steel caught Tiergan's eye and he turned his head just in time to see Alan barreling towards him with the knife. Tiergan barely managed to catch the hyur's wrist in time, diverting the blade's course away from his chest before the two boys collided into each other, tumbling to the ground. The dagger slipped from Alan's grasp in the fall and everything that came next was a frenzied blur of violence and adrenaline.
Tiergan's blood came rushing loud in his ears, his heart pounding in his chest like a wardrum sounding off his last moments. The children frantically traded blows, cracking knuckles against each other's bodies and faces, kicking, screaming, and clawing at each other in a frantic bid for dominance and survival. Then Tiergan felt something puncture into his side. Pain blossomed there like a poisoned flower and his entire world suddenly felt as though it were made of glass and fractured bone, every nerve aflame with mind-rending agony. Tiergan heard the highlander's voice resounding in his mind. Only one of them would leave the room alive. The other would die here. Alone. Forgotten.
A meaningless end to a meaningless life.
The miqo'te felt something within him snap. A potent, blinding rage swallowed him up, consuming every thought and feeling in a terrifying blaze of white-hot fury. He tackled Alan down, straddling him, slamming his fist against the side of the other boy's face again, and again, and again. The hyur child let out a hoarse, howling cry of desperation, but Tiergan silenced him, wrapping his hands around the other boy's neck, squeezing, strangling...
When the world finally went still and the heat of his rage finally died away, Tiergan pulled his shaking hands away from Alan's throat. The hyur was still and unmoving, his eyes fixed sightlessly to the ceiling, mouth open in a soundless scream of horror. The miqo'te looked downward at himself and saw the dagger plunged deep into his right side, Alan's hand clutching the hilt in a deathgrip. A rich, dark crimson was soaking into his tunic around the wound, life gradually draining away from him with every breath. Tiergan tried to take hold of the knife only to feel an overwhelming burst of pain push the breath from his lungs. He sank to the floor at Alan's side, the edges of his vision going dark, the scent of blood and steel heavy in the air.
Somewhere in the distance, he could hear someone speaking. A stranger asking another if the kitten was worth buying, worth saving.
As blackness finally shrouded out his vision, Tiergan heard the highlander male who'd presented the dagger chuckling softly, replying in that harsh, gravelly tone.
“Did you see his eyes? He's perfect.â€