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The Story
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Sella
(last edited Jun 07, 2008 10:46PM)
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Jun 01, 2008 05:30PM

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me!!!!!
Kyalla's mother lay close to death, slipping closer with every passing minute.
Kyalla's mother lay close to death, slipping closer with every passing minute.
((then her father could go seek the help of the village witch, and she could say that he has to sacrifice what is dearest to him in order to save his wife, and so on so on, maybe???????????))

Kyalla never left her mother's side. She held her mother's hand, hoping that she would not die.

Kyalla tried to hide her tears. "Very bad," she sighed. "Mother might...she might die." Kyalla fought past the hard lump in her throat.
"Go get the Healer," Kyalla's father told her.
"But-" Kyalla tried to protest. She didn't want to leave her mother's side, in case her mother died when she was gone.
Kyalla's father shook his head. "I'll stay with her. But you need to go get the Healer, now, before it gets worse."
Kyalla nodded and, with one more concerned look at her mother, she raced out of the hut.

But her family's magic had dried up with the river when the drought began. Without water nearby, their magic wouldn't work. It couldn't because they relied on the water god for their powers. Without the water, there was no water god, and no magic. Without the magic, her mother was wasting away from some illness foreign to their home. They needed a healer, and soon.

(Veronica, they live in a village, not a farm. :D)
Kyalla looked around desperately, and hurried up to the first person she saw. "Where does the Healer live?" She asked breathlessly.
"Over there." The person pointed to a hut on the edge of the village, slightly bigger than all the others. Kyalla thanked her, then started running as fast as she could towards the house. She rushed in and startled a plump, old lady tending the fire.
"What in the world is the matter?" Healer asked Kyalla.
"It's mother! She's very, very sick." Kyalla said frantically.
The Healer grabbed her bag and cane, and began hobbling after Kyalla.

The Healer took out herbs, stones, and shells. She tossed the herbs into the air, set them on fire, and chanted and tossed the stones and shells as the flames devoured the dry plants quickly.

With large, blank eyes, the Healer locked her eyes on Kyalla's father. "The future holds naught but loss for you." She intoned in a blank voice. "To save one is to lose the other, to lose is to save, to save is to lose. The mother dies, the daughter stays. The daughter is given, the mother lives."



Her father looked at the blue bottle with concern. "It seems like this will only prolong your mother's death, not eliminate it. But it's all we've got..."
The bottle was mostly crystal, with only a small drop of thick blue liquid in it.

"Patience, patience," Kyalla's father chided her, although he too looked worried. "If the healer says so, it will help for a little bit." He leaned down and poured the one drop into Kyalla's mother's mouth.

Kyalla stared at her mother in shock. The god of the dead had told her mother that she was trying to find the godess of water.

"What...what do you mean?" Kyalla stammered, shocked to find her mother speaking.


"No. I wasn't dreaming. I'm sure that Xanthos told me that you went to find Aitera, and that you had followed the river upstream!"
"But Ma, there is no river anymore. The drought dried it all up."

Kyalla looked at her father with exasperation. "What's wrong with her?" She whispered.
But Kyalla's father was fluttering over his wife. As the Healer's words played themselves in his head, he made up his mind. "Sacrifice to save from the crazed." He whispered, desperate. "I must sacrifice one for the other."

"Yes, yes, I'm fine," Kyalla's father muttered. "Fine..."
Kyalla's mother slumped back onto the thin straw mat after swallowing the drop of bitter blue liquid. "Quickly." Kyalla's father hissed to himself, constructing an elaborate altar.

"It's the only way to save your mother!" Kyalla's father said.
"What is the only way? Father, what are you going to do?"
He took a deep breath. "Kyalla, the only way to save mother is to sacrifice one of us."
Kyalla gasped. "What? Father, you're going to kill one of us?" She shrieked.
"Forever with one, never with the other." He mumbled.

Her father looked up. "Kyalla. You know the price of separating one from death. You. To Xanthos."


"Please," her father said quietly. "It's the only way. Do it for your mother. She gave life to you, and now you must give your life in return."

"I'll do it."
Her father smiled weakly. "You know I love you, and I'll meet you in the afterlife, hand in hand with Mom."

"Hold it!" A strange bright light filled the room, as some tall dark, handsome stranger stepped in. "I forbid it."

The god smiled and lifted Kyalla's face with his hand so that he could stare into her eyes. "You do not need to bow down to me, beautiful one," he murmured. Then he turned to Kyalla's father. "I am Xelos, God of Air. You shall not harm your daughter."
Kyalla's father narrowed his eyes. "But I don't have a choice!" he shouted. Xelos cast Kyalla's father a look of sympathy.

"Will not." Xelos smiled a glorious crooked smile, and held out a hand to Kyalla. "I heal."
"heal?!" she gasped. the power to heal was one of the most sacred rituals in the village. For one to heal would take immense power. "Yes to heal. But I can't do it alone Kyalla." Xelos said looking her in the eye.
"I need love." Xelos continued
"l-love?" Kyalla asked. The grand god smiled at her. "could you have a big enough heart to love me Kyalla?" Xelos asked with hope in his eyes.
"Oh!" Kyalla gasped, "Y--yes, I think."
She looked to her mothers pale face, turned to see her fathers glimmer of hope. She would do this for her family if not for Xelos. He held his hand out to Kyalla. She started to walk towards him. She heard her mother gasp again. Kyalla whirled to see her mother look at Kyalla with empty eyes. "don't go to him Kyalla! He's evil! You must come to me! To Xanthos!" She cried. Kyalla felt shivers run up her spine