Thursday, October 8, 2015

Lasts & Firsts, A Poem


All Photos by Stephanie Landis



Yesterday I spent the afternoon riding in the combine with my Dad as he harvested corn; both happiness and sadness rode along with us. I have lived on this farm my entire life. Recently the decision was made to sell the 4th generation family farm, and my family has been experiencing the bittersweetness of many firsts and many lasts on the journey. I took my camera to capture the last (for us at least) harvest on this farm we've called home for so long. Afterward, I immediately sat down and wrote this poem.








Lasts and Firsts


Last harvest on the home farm;
Such subtle things we plant with the seeds in spring
when hope grows as green as the grass—
Love, fear, dreams, promises.

Last harvest on the home farm;
Are we harvesting our dreams
between the combine’s massive red teeth,
or demolishing our fears, one row at a time?

Last harvest on the home farm;
Harvest begins, and draws to an end as we mark each passage—
the last field of corn, the last chaff floating like snow, the last time
the humming of the corn dryer will lull us to sleep at night.

Last harvest on the home farm;
Autumn rolls on like a freight train, unaware,
as we count down the lasts, knowing the lasts
will be followed by firsts.

 Last harvest on the home farm;

We weep, we laugh, we dance among the shucks.
We imagine another spring in another field
with a new row of hopes, dreams, and fears to seed.

Last harvest on the home farm;
The combine roars; the farmer smiles.
The corn falls; the field is bared.

We start anew.







Wednesday, September 23, 2015

All We Need





Chatter, laughter, the sounds of a set being torn apart, rearranged by nameless people floating about the stage like ghosts in black. These sounds are just the back track to the real melody, the indefinable quality of soundless expectancy. This is the soundtrack of a night that hasn’t yet begun. There is anticipation in the atmosphere.
Blue lights flash, musicians in silhouette. A lone microphone sits center stage. The tension rockets. Drums. Guitar. Piano. Instruments welded by specialists in energy escalation. Somewhere in the crowd a girl wonders what he’s doing backstage right at this moment. A boy holds his breath, waiting.
We are ready. Primed. About to explode.
From the wings of the stage he appears and the roar is palpable. We feel it in our chests, in our feet, as it pours from our collective mouths. Arms wave, hands collide in manic joy as he smiles, dances his way to the stage and grabs the mic. His voice pierces through us like a spear thrown with the perfect trajectory. It carries us high, higher, until we are with him, right there with him as he belts out the words, as he revels in his triumphant entrance.
We are celebratory. We are wild. We are dancing, swaying, clapping. We are screaming “I love you,” to a perfect stranger on a perfect stage, on a perfect night, because in this moment there is no such thing as a stranger. We are all connected.
As he pours his heart and soul out onto the stage, we give ours right back to him. And we wonder is this baring of a soul for him, or for us? We wonder does he know? Does he realize the impact one song, one lyric, one note, one word, can have? Does he know we are here because something irrevocable happened the first time we heard him sing? Does he know the repercussions one night here, bathed in this sound, in this explosion of shared energy, can create?
Somewhere in the audience a girl cries because someone broke her heart, but with each tap of her toe her heart mends. A man takes his wife’s hand, resolving to fix his marriage. A boy decides life is worth living. A woman is inspired to chase her dreams. In this auditorium, under the flashing lights, through the haze, and the rhythm pounding in our veins, we are all changed. If only in the tiny second when someone chooses to dance instead of sit still, to laugh instead of cry, to be kind instead of angry.
He knows, we think, but we want to be sure. So we scream, and sing, and clap and flail. We dance, and make fools of ourselves in the name of music, in the name of love, in the name of this perfect night.
We are charged. We are changed. We are made new.
One night. One man. One band. One song.

            This is all we need.


Note: This short short story was inspired by the Nate Ruess concert I attended last night, and for that reason only I chose to reference the performer in this piece as a 'he.' All music and all musicians have the power to change us, and for that I'm grateful. Play on, Steph

Thursday, May 28, 2015

Sky Eyes

 This story is about the main character in the novel I'm working on. A bit of a 'prequel,' I guess you could say. I hope you enjoy this little excursion into her world.  ~Steph

Image found on Pinterest.com



Sky Eyes hefted her bow, squinted at her target, and let the arrow fly. It hit the tree with a satisfying thud. The tree was riddled with arrows poking out of the bark like porcupine quills, and the most recent addition nearly split another down the center as it hit. Sky Eyes turned, a satisfied tight-lipped smile playing on her mouth. “Look, Volt. You cannot say I’m not ready.”
The large white wolf basking in the sunshine opened his yellow eyes. He gave the tree a cursory glance, unimpressed. “I do not see how this skill applies.”
Sky Eyes wrinkled her nose, folding her arms across her chest. “Ataliks says I’m ready.” Ataliks was human, like Sky Eyes, and he visited her as often as he could, teaching her all about the human world and their ways. Sky Eyes was not much interested in humans other than Ataliks, but she listened and learned because it seemed important to him.
“Ataliks is human,” Volt said. “He knows nothing of the wolf’s way.”
 “I have been hunting squirrels and rabbits for years.” Sky Eyes knew Volt could not argue with this fact, for she had begun hunting small prey as soon as she was big enough to carry a bow. “And I have been following the pack on hunts for months,” she continued. “I’m ready for bigger prey. When will you let me truly hunt?”
 “You are yet a pup.”
“I’m not,” Sky Eyes protested. A small growl built at the back of her throat, but she was careful not to let it slip out.
Volt’s ears twitched as if he caught the sound despite her efforts, but he did not comment. Instead, he sighed. “You may join the hunt tonight.”
Sky Eyes yipped with delight. Lowering herself to her hands and knees she crawled toward Volt, the One Male, or leader of the pack. Her whole body wiggled with joy as she bumped under his chin with her nose, expressing her respect and love for him. Volt tolerated her affection for a few ticks, and then turned his face away, teeth flashing briefly. Immediately the girl backed off, returning to the arrow peppered tree.
Another pack mate, a gray female called Loper, passed close by Sky Eyes. With a playful growl Sky Eyes pounced. Loper jumped out of the way, turned quickly, and tackled the child. They rolled, growling and tussling until Loper bit down on the girl’s bare arm. As Sky Eyes cried in pain the she wolf retreated, ears flattening in apology. Sky Eyes rubbed her arm where a fresh, red scratch trailed down her forearm, joining the myriad other scabs and scars crisscrossing her tender flesh. Sky Eyes dragged her tongue along the raw scratch once, then, blue eyes dancing, she turned back to Loper, ready for round two. Loper play bowed, and led the girl on a merry chase. Eventually they collapsed in the shade of a bush, Loper panting heavily. Sky Eyes stuck out her tongue, mimicking the wolf.
Sky Eyes yawned. Perhaps I can earn a new name on the hunt tonight, she said, using her magical gift to speak mind to mind with Loper.
Loper snorted. It may take years for you to earn a new name.
I have been stuck with this pup name for ages, Sky Eyes complained.
Loper’s lips pulled back in a wolf grin. Patience, pup.
Loper had graduated from pup level status in the pack months ago, and she enjoyed flaunting her achievement. Sky Eyes rumbled, and shoved the wolf’s shoulder. I remember when you were called Graceless.
Loper’s lip lifted at the reminder of the name she had received for her clumsy, lumbering walk as pup. Now one of the fastest members of the pack, she had left her pup name far behind.
Sky Eyes tried not to be jealous, but she had seen many pups grow up in her eight years and she struggled hard not to feel left behind each time. When she was adopted by the wolves she came with the name Sky, from her birth mother, but the wolves had immediately changed her name to Sky Eyes because of the dark blue, sky-like color of her eyes; a unique feature no wolf could claim. The name was distinctive, but Sky Eyes was eager to shed it for something more admirable. Something to say she was a valuable member of the pack, no longer a troublesome pup.
Sky Eyes sighed, and curled her body around Loper, her injured arm under the wolf’s nose. The shish-shish sound of Loper’s tongue on her skin lulled her to sleep.

* * *

That evening, as the moon hovered above the trees, the pack gathered. They crowded around Volt and his mate, One Ear. They jostled and fought for position, body’s lithe and eager, their tongues darting out to lick the chins of the Ones. Sky Eyes scuttled about on her knees, whining with excitement.
Volt lifted his nose and sniffed, then set off. One Ear followed in his tracks and one by one, the rest of the pack fell in line behind them. Sky Eyes trotted behind Loper, her quiver and bow strapped across her back. Her heart pounded in her chest, and her skin practically thrummed with anticipation. She been on hunts before but she had never been allowed to do more than watch. Now she had a chance to prove her worth as hunter, and she was determined to succeed.
The wolves traveled for several miles, until they caught the scent of a deer herd, or Sharp Hooves as the wolves called them. Volt led them in a circular route, down wind of the herd. The pack spread out, hiding in the brush. They watched the herd with keen eyes, seeking the perfect target. They kept attuned to each other, waiting for someone to find the right Sharp Hoof and signal the start of the hunt.
Sky Eyes felt as if her eyes were boring holes into the Sharp Hooves as she stared at them. Her gaze strayed to their legs, thin and weak looking, she knew they could kick hard enough to bruise and slice if provoked. She watched the Sharp Hooves as they walked, looking for a limp, or a wobbling knee, anything to suggest an easy kill.
One of the Sharp Hooves, an older female, coughed. Instantly, all wolf eyes, ears and noses trained on her. The pack seemed to link minds as their muscles bunched, and bodies lowered, ready to run. As one, they burst from the brush.
The Sharp Hooves responded instantly, bounding away, nimble hooves leaving the earth for a few ticks as if they would fly. The wolf pack chased the herd, keeping along the outside. Sky Eyes raced alongside Loper, but was soon left behind, not quite quick enough on her human legs. She kept running, watching the pack’s movements, trying to foresee the best way for her to help.
Sky Eyes veered off to the right. The Sharp Hooves had been grazing in a sheltered hollow that narrowed to a ravine up ahead. Sky Eyes raced along the lip of the ravine. The herd had slowed a little as the wolves drove them into the ravine and the wolves began darting in among them, nipping, trying to separate their quarry from center of the herd. Loper dove in, jaws snapping, and received a kick on the nose. Sky Eyes forced herself to run faster. When she was satisfied with her position she knelt and drew an arrow from her quiver. With silent proficiency born of years of practice, she nocked an arrow drew back the string. She looked for the sick Sharp Hoof and found her at the back of the herd. She must be tiring, Sky Eyes thought.
Loper sped to the front of the herd, forcing the Sharp Hooves to split around her. Two other pack mates joined Loper, cutting the sick Sharp Hoof from the rest of the herd. The Sharp Hoof turned and headed back the way she had come, only to found Volt and One Ear waiting. The Sharp Hoof spun in a circle, panicked, as Volt and One Ear stalked closer. Sky Eyes squinted down the arrow shaft, but she could not take the shot with the wolves in the way. She watched, barely breathing.
With one last burst of energy the Sharp Hoof hurtled over Volt just as he lunged, teeth bared. Forelegs tucked to her chest, the Sharp Hoof sailed over him and Sky Eyes bow twanged. The Sharp Hoof twisted in mid air, bellowing in surprise and pain as the arrow lodged in her hindquarters. Sky Eyes winced. In her excitement she had forgotten to close off her magic, leaving her mind wide open to the Sharp Hoof. Time seemed to slow as Sky Eyes watched her hit the ground. The Sharp Hoof fell on her knees, and the wolves were upon her.
The Sharp Hoof’s terror and agony swept through Sky Eyes, paralyzing her. She could not move, could not even think to shut off the connection. Her vision went blurry and for a moment she thought she would pass out. The Sharp Hoof’s consciousness abruptly vanished from her mind.
It was over. The Sharp Hoof was dead.
Sky Eyes collapsed onto her hands and knees, retching. Tears ran down her cheeks. She felt the wolves’ hunger and pleasure as they feasted. Bile rose in her throat, and for the first time since she had learned how to use her magical gift, she closed off her connection with the pack.
Instantly she felt bereft. Alone.
One of the wolves was calling her; she could feel the presence knocking on her conscience like a woodpecker drilling on a tree. Cautiously, she opened a crack, allowing the voice inside her head. It was Loper.
What are you waiting for? Loper asked. Come eat.
Sky Eyes fisted her shaking hands, and glared at the pool of vomit at her feet. Her nose wrinkled, and she growled, frustrated. She was acting entirely unwolf-like. She scrubbed at her face, removing the trace of tears, and ate a handful of grass to disguise her breath. Then she trotted down to join the pack, quiver and bow rattling as she went.
 Her feet slowed as she drew close. Finally, she stopped moving altogether. She could not bring herself to join the pack. Not after she had shared in the Sharp Hoof’s valiant effort to survive, and had suffered through her moment of death. Not after Sky Eyes realized she had used her magic to read the Sharp Hoof’s actions. She felt like she had used her magic unfairly. Sky Eyes walked away, and curled up in the grass, her back on the wolves. Her stomach growled, but she ignored it. Time passed and she dozed.
Sky Eyes.
She sat up, and looked over her shoulder. Volt stood there, gazing at her with his warm, yellow eyes. His stomach was distended, engorged with all the good meat he had eaten. He padded closer, lying down beside her, his shoulder pressed against her hip.
Are you unwell?
No.
            Why did you not join us? I thought you would be strutting like a proud jaybird after helping to make this kill.
Sky Eyes grimaced, insulted. I do not strut, she grumbled.
 Volt snorted in amusement, then asked, what is truly bothering you?
Sky Eyes looked down at her hands. I used my magic to help kill the Sharp Hoof. It feels wrong. Like…like it was too easy.
Without your help the pack would not eat. I do not see how this is wrong.
Sky Eyes shrugged. I do not know if it is, but it feels wrong.
So learn from it.
What?
Volt sighed. Do not be a daft pup, Sky Eyes. Learn from your mistake. If you feel it is wrong to use your magic in this way, then-
Do not do it again.
Volt licked her hand, then sighed again and rested his head on her knee. Sky Eyes stroked the top of his head. She tried but could not dislodge the memory of the Sharp Hoof’s death. It echoed through her as if it were imprinted on her soul. She sniffed, fighting back tears.
Volt shifted. What is it?
I forgot to close off my magic before…before the Sharp Hoof died.
            All things must die, Sky Eyes.
            I know, but…why does it have to be so horrible?
            Volt’s brow furrowed, and Sky Eyes knew he did not understand. We kill to live.
            I know.
            If we did not hunt, we would die. Is that what you want?
            No! I just…I wish I did not know what it felt like to die.
            Volt was silent for a few ticks, as if he needed time to digest what she was saying. At last he said, perhaps it is a good thing.
            Sky Eyes did not see how this could be so, and said as much.
            Will you forget this experience?
            Sky Eyes shook her head, and spoke out loud. “No.”
            Volt followed her lead, switching to the human tongue. “Then perhaps it will serve as a reminder. There is an order to life, Sky Eyes. Wolves do not kill for fun, but to survive. We know the order of these things from the time we are born.”
            “Adapt or die,” Sky Eyes said, quoting an old wolf saying.
            The corners of Volt’s lips pulled back in a grin. Indeed.
            The rest of the pack joined them, gathering around with full bellies and contented sighs.
            Did you see how true Sky Eyes fang flew? Loper asked, referring to the arrow as a fang, as most of the wolves did.
            It did not fly, said One Ear, pausing to lick Sky Eyes’ cheek as she passed. It sang.
            Sky Eyes felt a pleased blush creeping up her neck.
Volt lifted his nose from the grass. He looked at Sky Eyes. Fang Song, he said.
Anticipation bubbled in Sky Eye’s gut. Her lips parted in awe. Are you…are you giving me a new name?
All the wolves were at attention now, waiting for Volt’s answer.
You proved yourself an able hunter today, and many times over in the past. All those squirrels and rabbits.
Sky Eyes blue eyes were round with surprise. She may have bragged to Loper about earning a new name, but she had not truly expected it would happen so soon.
Volt rose. Welcome to the pack, Fang Song.
Fang Song, thought Sky Eyes, her mouth a wide, toothless grin. It is beautiful.
And strong, said Loper.
A good name, agreed One Ear.
Volt’s muzzle tipped up, and he howled, announcing the newest pack member to all wolves within range. The rest of the pack joined in, their voices starting out low, and then rising in pitch.
Sky Eyes, now Fang Song, opened her mouth and added her voice. I am Fang Song, she howled. I am wolf. Beneath these words another truth echoed, its meaning clear to those who knew how to listen.
I belong.  



Image found on onebigphoto.com

Image found on galleryhip.com

Friday, April 24, 2015

Ravenna





 Ravenna
(Pronunciation note: The female characters in this story have ‘na’ attached to the end of their name, and the males ‘ra.’  So Raven becomes ‘Raven-nuh,’ Teak becomes ‘Teak-ruh’ and so on.)


We dance, our antelope hooves nimble and quick along the cliff edge, our wings outspread to catch us if we fall. Swanna laughs, head thrown back, white wings gleaming. She is all light and mirth, all sweetness and intoxication.

 Chimera, from the Aeries clan, we are human from our head down to our thighs, but the similarities end there. Just below our pelvis the skin tapers into brown fur, before changing completely to the legs of an antelope. Antelope ears and eyes are set into human faces as varied as the insects that crawl the earth. Powerful wings sprout from our backs.  We are decidedly not human, but not fully beast either and the human hunters that roam this mountain hate Chimera like us more than any others.
We have been warned about the hunters. We should be cautious, and quiet. We should not be here at all. But we are young, rebellious, and stupid and the sun is warm and golden on our skin. The sky stretches, sapphire blue, dotted with perfect puffy clouds. Lush green grass flattens beneath our hooves as our laughter, mine low and growling, Swanna’s high and ringing, tangles together, then soars across the mountaintop. We are sure of our own cleverness. Sure we will be young and free forever.

Everything shatters in an instant.
Swanna’s dance abruptly ceases, her expression bewildered as she falls, an arrow protruding from her chest. I fling myself on top of her, dragging her to the shelter of an overhanging rock.
My sister, my twin, lies in a pool of her own blood, her wings splattered crimson.
“Go,” she tells me, gasping.
“I won’t leave you. I can’t.”
“You,” she struggles to speak, hands clutching at the arrow shaft, “must go. Now.”
“No!”
Sudden peace overtakes her and she stops struggling. “Ravenna, look at your hands.”
I look. They are red with blood. It is everywhere, in the dirt, on my skin. Even the scent hovers in the air, making me sick. I know what it means, and I know that she knows. “Swan,” I whisper. “I can’t leave you.”
“You must.” She lifts her hand, wincing with the effort, and strokes my cheek. “Leave me and live, sister. Live for me.”
I shake my head, tears blurring my vision. I remember a long ago oath, a promise sworn in blood. It hovers between us, but I can’t force out the words.
“Go. Now. “
“But-”
“They are coming.”
Choking on a sob, I bend down, pressing a kiss to her forehead. “I love you, Swan. I will always love you.”
I leap into the air, wings pumping. I turn back for one last look at Swanna’s dwindling form, and an arrow pierces my left wing. I spiral out of control, and plummet, barely avoiding collisions with jagged outcroppings as I tumble.
Bones crunch as I hit the ground, and my left wing crumples beneath me. With gritted teeth I force myself up. My left wing hangs useless. With great care I fold it to my back, biting back a wail.
I run.
I abandon my sister, the better half of myself.
I, with my wings of ebony, and the dark, brooding soul to match, endure, while my white winged twin, so much more deserving than me, dies alone.     

            It should be me.

I run for what seems like days, but is only a few hours. The journey to the mountain is only a few hours flight from our home, but it will take me much longer to return on hoof with a broken wing to coddle.
I think of our father, furious at us for disobeying and probably worried sick. I think of Teakra, Swanna’s lover, and my friend. He will surely be angry that we left him behind. I think of what I will have to tell them when I get home, and nearly give up right there.
Somehow, I push on until night falls. I no longer fear the hunter’s pursuit. If they catch me now they can have me. Completely spent, I don’t bother with a fire, or food. I sleep, heart aching, broken wing throbbing.
            I dream of Swanna falling, arrow struck. Over and over the vision repeats, until I wake, my human chest heaving. With a fury I did not know I possess I claw, rending scratches up and down my arms, my torso, my neck.
The humans think we are ugly. Deformed, and debased creatures not worthy to live in the precious, perfect society they desire. We are devils, and monsters.
It is the humans, with their shackles, and weapons and hatred of things they cannot understand that are the real monsters. Happy to enslave us, when they aren’t intent on destroying us first, and at this moment I hate the human parts of my form. I hate how they make me akin to the ones that killed my sister. Blood flows freely down my arms and chest by the time I stop, to tired to continue.
I fall asleep sobbing.
            This time I dream of the blood ceremony. An ancient Aerie tradition, the blood ceremony pairs two Aeries in a bond of loyalty and survival. Two Aeries pledge to watch over each other, whether in actual battle, or just in the battle of every day life. The bonded partners agree to do whatever it takes to keep each other safe from hunters. For us, death at the hands of our bond partner is preferable to death by hunter or worse, enslavement. In this way, we can grant each other mercy and peace, in an age when both are improbable.
            In the dream, I feel blood dripping down my fingers, warm and sticky, from the slices on my palm. I press my hand to Swan’s, as I had done in reality just a few years ago. Our mingled blood merely a symbol of the blood ties we already share. Swanna’s smile radiates utter confidence in her choice as she speaks the words of the pledge. I smile back, and open my mouth. What comes out is not words, but black shadows. They flow from my mouth, creepy tendrils reaching for Swanna’s neck. I scream, and the shadows flow faster, covering my sister, winding around her until she is wrapped up like a butterfly in a cocoon.  I cover my mouth, but it is to late.
Swanna is gone, eaten up by my darkness.
             I jolt upright, my entire body shaking. Guilt scrabbles up my chest, choking me. I could have eased her passage from this world to the next. I had vowed to do so, but instead, weak and afraid, I had run, leaving her in agony.
New, horrible thoughts occur to me, and I actually wince as they reverberate inside my skull. What if the hunters found her before she died? What if they tortured her?  What if her wound was not fatal at all, and they take her as a slave?
I remember the moment right before I ran, how I had tried to speak, tried to follow through on my vow. Swanna had to have known what I was going to say. She knew that I was not strong enough, probably knew when she pledged that day so many years ago.
She had sacrificed her own peace for mine.
Swanna’s face swims behind my eyes, and I hear her chiming laugh. I cry until I’m as parched and arid as the Sunred Desert.
Darkness, the darkness that lives in me, always swirling just beneath my skin, escapes. It consumes me, eating me from the inside out and I drown in shame and guilt, in the truth of my deficiencies.
Ravenna.
I choke on a sob, startled out of the dark hole I’ve climbed into. I stand, senses on high alert, antelope ears swiveling.
A presence hovers behind my left shoulder. For a single moment the voice, the essence, feels familiar, but then I’m overwhelmed and terrified. I race away itno the night.
The presence follows.
No matter how hard or fast I run it is always just behind me. I think it is the hunters, but it doesn’t feel solid or physically present, yet it oozes anger. I keep running long past the point of breakdown. My legs ache, and my broken wing jars with each step, sharp and agonizing. By the time I make it to the village my hoof steps are sluggish, but I’m still moving. I’m barely conscious, and I don’t know how I’m still on my feet. As I step into the circle of huts, I finally fall. Aerie children watch me, their eyes wide. I hear shouts, and feel vibrations under my cheek as someone rushes toward me.
I don’t know if the spirit is lingering, but I can’t find the energy to care. Go ahead, take me, I think.
Just before I close my eyes, I swear I feel something soft brush my cheek.

* * *

When I wake a few days later, my father sits by my bed. He takes my hand. “Thank the gods you’re awake.”
            I try to sit up. My father helps me situate my bandaged wing, and offers me a drink of water.
            I can see the question floating in his eyes, but he doesn’t voice it. Not yet.
            “Are you hungry? I have soup.”
            I don’t answer.
            He swallows, his eyes bright with unshed tears. “Ravenna, where is your sister?”
            I turn my face to the wall, so I don’t have to see his agony, his disappointment when I tell him. I hear him sob; feel his hand on my shoulder before he rushes out, abandoning me as I abandoned her.

By the time I’m able to leave our hut everyone knows what happened. They watch me with sympathetic eyes, and whisper condolences. They cluck with concern. My anger ignites as easily as a strip of bark held to a flame.
I don’t deserve sympathy.
My father drifts about, as ethereal as a ghost. At night he locks himself in his room, his wails seeping through the door like water through paper. Swanna was the one who took care of him, the one who knew how to make him smile. Without her, he is like an orphaned baby bird, featherless and lost. Permanently barred from the sky.
         Teakra wanders the village, dazed and hollow-eyed.
Teakra, tawny winged and darkly handsome, so like me, with the same wild black hair, and gold eyes, that he could have passed more easily as my twin then Swanna. If only he were not bright and buoyant, so like her in soul.
The three of us were inseparable once. We started as downy winged chicks learning to fly; yet somehow we grew together instead of apart. Even when it became clear they were falling for each other, they managed to include me in the tumble. While they lived and loved with abandon, I pretended to hate their delight in everything, their complete awe of the world. The truth is, they made me lighter. They canceled out my blackness.
Now the tie that bound us together has been severed. Teakra is stone-limbed and heavy, his face purple and shadowed as if he’s been bruised by life. He reflects my own grief, and I cannot bear to look at him.
So I don’t.

* * *

My wing heals quickly, but my heart is still as raw and jagged as a fresh arrow wound when Teakra finally seeks me out. I sit under a pine tree, crushing needles between my fingers, breathing in the pungent, spicy scent.
            “Ravenna,” he says.
            I don’t look up. I want him to leave, but he waits, silent.
“What do you want, Teakra?”
            “Are you mad at me?”
            “No.”
            “Then why,” I hear his hooves swishing through the grass as he moves closer. “Why have you been avoiding me?”
I keep my eyes glued to my hands. The oil from the pine needles coats my fingers, and I rub them together.
If I look at him I will break. Shatter. Explode.
“Look at me, Ravenna.”
Surprised by the sharp command, I raise my eyes and some part of me fragments into a thousand pieces. I drop my eyes.
“Go away.”
“Raven, I just want…I need to…” He runs a hand through his hair, a finger along the edge of his wing. His antelope ears swivel toward me, but his eyes swerve away.

“Just say it, Teakra.”
He flinches away from the venom in my voice, and then speaks with a little venom of his own.
“Say what? That I need you? Fine! I need you, Ravenna! I need to talk to you, to be with you…to…to,” his voice cracks. “It’s like I’ve lost both of you.”
I’m taken aback. This is not what I expected, not what I want.
            I lost her too, you know.” His voice is husky now, and soft with hurt. “I understand how you feel.”
            I leap up. “You don’t understand!”
            His eyes flash, and he steps closer. “Why? Is your grief so much more significant than mine? Do you think she was more important to you? Gods, Raven, I loved her too!”
He pulls at his hair and I remember how it used spike under his hands from all that constant tugging. Now it flops, lifeless, as if even his hair cannot afford to exert excess energy. As if every inch of him is in mourning.
            My anger wilts. “No, of course not. I just want to be left alone.”
            I turn away.
            “It’s not your fault.”
My mouth tightens. I keep my back to him.
“Ravenna.”
Tentative fingers touch my shoulder.
“Swanna wouldn’t want you to-”
I spin on my heel. “You don’t know anything!”
“I know it’s not your fault.”
“I left her, Teakra! I left her there to die alone, to rot alone! I could have…should have,” I pause, and then the words rip from me, leaving me bloody and broken. “I broke my pledge, Teakra. I didn’t even try!”
“Raven,” his eyes are warm, loving. He reaches for me.
Doesn’t he hear what I’m saying? Doesn’t he know that I don’t deserve comfort, and certainly not love?
With a howl of rage, I throw myself at him. We crash in a pile of tangled limbs, and wings. I pummel his chest, wordless screams of anger and grief exploding from me.

He doesn’t fight back. I’m infuriated, out of my mind with wrath. I reach for his face, and he brings his wing up, batting my arm aside. I teeter, trying to regain my balance, but he moves quickly, catching me in his arms. Pinned to his chest, I struggle and scream. I even bite, but he doesn’t let go.
I feel his hand snake up my neck. He pinches me behind my ear. Hard. My cries are choked off by sudden, uncontrollable sobs. Teakra’s wings enfold us in a tent of darkness.
            I cry, my face pressed to his chest. I cry and cry, until I think I could sail a boat down the river of my tears. Still, Teakra holds me. His hands are warm on my back, his wings brushing against my cheeks. I bring my own wings up, sheltering him as he does me. I feel his tears dripping down my neck; feel his chest heaving beneath me.
            We stay that way for a long time.

            “I see her everywhere.”
            “Me too.”
            “No, I mean…she’s haunting me.”
            We are sitting side by side, underneath the pine tree.
            “What?” Teakra turns to look at me. “Why?”
I shrug. “She’s mad at me. Because of what I did…or didn’t do. I think it’s holding her here.”
I don’t say that it’s my fault that she can’t cross to the Great Sky, but I know he reads it in my eyes.
 “You said that she told you to go, that she didn’t ask you to keep your pledge.”
            I shake my head. “She’s so furious, so full of hate,” tears slip from my eyes, and I’m surprised. I feel bone dry, as if I’ve cried all the liquid from my body. “I don’t…I don’t know how to make her understand that I’m sorry.”
            I jump when something soft brushes my check. I think it’s Teakra, but he’s staring at me with large eyes, his mouth a perfect round ‘O’.
            “Swan?” he whispers.
            I lurch to my feet, swinging my head from side to side, hands out before me as if I can fend off her anger. Something soft and warm swirls around me.
 Ravenna.
            I’m undone by the sound of her voice, more tears pour down my cheeks. “Swanna. Please forgive me.”
            There is nothing to forgive.
            “Please,” I beg.
Her spirit wafts tighter, and nestles next to my heart. I’m not angry with you, Raven. It is the darkness in you, the hatred you feel for yourself, that you projected onto me.
I shake my head, confused. “That can’t be right…I felt…I felt…”
What exactly had I felt?
Forgive yourself, Ravenna. Forgive yourself, and set me free. Perhaps you could not free my body, but you have the power to free my soul.
            The black hole in my heart recedes, as I suddenly understand.  I have been keeping her here, but not for the reasons I assumed. She stayed for me, not because of me. She stayed to show me how to love myself, to make sure I learned this time.
I long to keep her with me forever, my better half, the missing piece of me, and for a moment I contemplate holding on tighter. But I can’t do that to her. I won’t.
I let go, one clinging finger at a time.
            She leaves me, and I can’t hold back a gasp of pain. Teakra takes a step toward me and stops. I can tell the moment she touches him. Longing sharpens his features, making him at once ten years older and ten years younger. I can tell when she leaves him too. It is as if all the color, all the vibrancy drains from him, as it did from me.
            Teakra and I stand shoulder to shoulder, wing to wing, and watch as Swanna soars up into the indigo sky, and disappears in a silver starburst. Words float down to us, and I hear the echo of her voice as it was on the mountaintop. The same words, the same love behind them.
Live, sister. Live, my love. Just live.
Teakra takes my hand, and I feel the promise in his fingers. We may be broken now, but we have each other, and time. We will find a way to be whole again, but for now we will just live, through this day, and then one more, and then another, and anther after. I send my own message, through my touch to Teakra, through the sky to Swan.
I will live.
Just live.
That is one promise I can keep.