Isol didn't sleep anymore. Not in the same way other people did. His dreams were always the same. Each and every night since he came back home Isol saw a giant, endless field of sickly grass that stretched out as far as his eyes could see. And if he looked up, there would no starts in the night sky, only the swirling darkness and the somber moon above his head.
There, in that place, he was never alone. People he knew, people he used to call friends, waited for him. They always smiled at first, laughed and cheered like they did so many times in the past. But it all felt wrong to Isol. He knew there was no way for such a thing to ever happen in his life the same way he knew men without jaws or heads could laugh and talk.
"Aren't you happy?" asked Bors, his former captain, and hugged Isol with his only remaining arm. "No more scornful looks and hushed whispers. You are among friends here. It's going to be just like the old times."
No, Isol noted to himself, it won't be. For one, Bors barely looked like a human being at this point, with half of his body missing. He stepped on a mine, Isol recalled, and ordered his troops to proceed without him. No one ever saw him die; they just heard the explosion, and it was over. No more Bors.
"Just like the old times," repeated Ysma. "Remember our talks near the campfire? Well, you weren't much of a talker, so I did most of it. Still, good times. Simpler ones, too. It was us against them. Good guys on one side, bad guys – on another."
There weren't that many things different about Ysma. Just a small arrow still stuck in his throat and nothing more. It was a peaceful death, Isol remembered, he didn't suffer long. One arrow, and no more Ysma.
"We are all your friends, Isol," said Ysma. Just as he said that Isol noticed a few men standing near him. He knew their names, and they did his, and everything was well once again. Some of them missed arms or legs, but that didn't make any difference to Isol. "And we will never leave you alone, buddy."
Isol opened his eyes, feeling the softness of the mattress under his body and hearing the bed creak every time he moved. He always asked Anne for a harder mattress, but she never listened.
He couldn't summon any strength to stand up and do anything, so he simply laid there, staring at his ceiling, waiting for something to happen. Things always happened, whether he wanted them to happen or not, and he just needed to wait and keep an ear to the ground.
Someone knocked at his door so lightly the man could barely hear it. The wooden door slowly opened, revealing his visitor, a boy that looked no older than ten. The boy's hair were dark brown like an oaken bark, slightly darker than his mother's.
"Ansel," said Isol. "Does Anne need something from me?"
There was no other reason for the boy to enter his room, Isol concluded. The boy didn't like him one bit, and he made this fact known plenty of times already. Their relationship weren't exactly hostile: the two of them simply preferred to ignore each other.
"You have a guest," Ansel muttered. "Mom told me to get upstairs and tell you that."
"I see." Isol got up on his feet and reached for his sword. He couldn't sleep without a weapon nearby anymore. It was a habit he developed a few years ago and a habit he wasn't proud of. Just as he was strapping the scabbard to his belt, he felt someone's intent stare.
It was Ansel, transfixed, his eyes glued to Isol's sword.
"Something else you need?" the man asked.
"I… I want to ask you something. But later," the boy said and hastily left.
Isol shrugged and followed him downstairs. His visitor was waiting.
The Blooming Dandelion was Anne's pride and joy. She opened the inn right after the war ended, using the money she and her husband were saving. Her husband, she told Isol, was a soldier, too, but he wanted to retire. It was his dream to start an inn, but Anne was the one that made it come true.
Sadly, the business wasn't exactly booming around these parts. Anne made enough money to keep herself and her son fed, and that alone made her happy. At least, Anne always looked happy.
"Oh, here he is," a boisterous voice announced Isol's presence. Its owner was sitting at a table with a half-empty mug of beer with one hand. The man's name Ando, and he was Isol's self-proclaimed best friend. To Isol, though, Ando was like an itch that wouldn't leave him alone – something he simply learned to live with.
"You look horrible today," noted Ando. He didn't like minding his own words, so he simply didn't do that at all. Everything Ando said Ando meant. Some people liked that about him, while some people didn't. "Not that you look better at any other day. You get enough sleep? Sleep is important, you know."
"What's the matter, Ando?" Isol cut the man short.
"Straight as an arrow, aren't you?" the man smiled. "I like that 'bout you. Really helps. If only more people were like you these days. Now, nothing is the same anymore, you know. Neither the people nor the world itself. It's like all the wonder went far away and I just missed the note."
"Ando," said Isol with more firmness in his voice.
"Right, right," Ando chuckled. "I talked to the leader of a mercenary group, and they need someone who knows his way around the sword. Someone experienced who wouldn't froze at the sight of blood. Men like you and me. Hardened and experienced."
"Are you offering me a job?"
"In a way. The thing is, they're preparing to raid at a bandit camp, and I told the man I won't go unless you do the same."
"You have a lot of faith in me," said Isol. "Any reason?"
"I saw you fight. That's more than enough of a reason for me to want you on my side. Besides, weren't you searching for a job? Think about it: you'll do some fine coin here." Ando's eyes shone with glee, and that made Isol think of the dragons from those old legends people used to tell. He imagined a giant lizard, sitting on a pile of gold, the same look in the creature's eyes. "So," the man nudged, "you in?"
As a decorated war veteran and a hero, Isol received a pension. It wasn't much – barely enough to survive – and even that modest sum got smaller with every passing month. Isol wasn't desperate yet, but given some time, he would be. Not to mention he had to pay his rent soon.
He slowly inhaled through his nose, closed his eyes and silently counted to ten. "Yes," he said, feeling something hard form within his chest. "Yes, I am in."
They shook hands and left the inn.
The work itself was relatively simple. The scouts would locate the bandit camp after which the main force would surround the whole place. "Five silver coins for a head," the mercenary leader said grimly, "just the head. No other parts needed."
Isol did just that. It all came naturally to him. The blood and the screams reminded him of that place, of that time that he left behind. He wanted to lock all these feeling, this anger behind a giant door and throw away the key, but he couldn't. So, he opened that door and let everything out.
"Well, guess that's it for now," said Ando. His calm voice made Isol snap out of his trance.
He looked at his bloodied sword, at a corpse that laid at his feet. He felt tired, immensely so. Like the weight of the entire world was now on his shoulders. And he wanted to go home and close his eyes and return to that place again.
Isol slowly inhaled through his nose, smelling the blood in the air, closed his eyes, hearing the screams come from somewhere in the distance, and silently started counting to ten, remembering what happened a few hours ago. "Enough," he said weakly.
"Yup," said Ando. "Don't get too comfortable, though. There might be a few strays left."
He pulled an arrow out of his quiver and tensed up. "Stay here and take care of the bodies," said Ando. "We can't carry 'em back to the camp as is, so you need to chop off their heads. Don't worry: I'll watch your back."
Isol did as he was told. Then and now, he always did exactly what he was told. Perhaps, that's what made him such a good soldier. A sword in his hand, he grabbed the first body and took a good look at the human whose life he so swiftly ended.
It was a mindless task, but Isol couldn't quite shake of a single thought that echoed inside his skull. He looked at the dead man and saw himself there. The only difference between him and those bandits was that he was lucky enough to find a place for himself. Just that alone made all the difference.
In essence, they all were the same. They were people that weren't quite real anymore, and that made them less than people. They learned how to kill and forgot everything else. Forgot what a gentle touch felt like, what the words "kindness" and "love" really meant. They became weapons, and weapons that weren't needed were thrown away. It was simple as that.
Isol was a weapon, and unlike the dead bandit he was holding, someone still needed him. To kill weapons that were not needed. This is somewhat clever, he admitted to himself, one way or another, there would be less weapons left in this world.
He sighed and tried to think about something else. Little things like the taste of Anne's stew or the warmth of his bed. Just about anything other than focusing on what he did at the moment.
When Isol was about to finish with the first corpse, his ears caught something strange. Someone was crying, and he could hear them. First he looked around, searching for Ando, but his partner was nowhere in sight, so he moved on his own, following the voice.
He wasn't sure why, but he felt a strong need to find the source of this wailing. It was like someone was calling for him. Following the sound, he found an old, half-crumbled wooden hut. One hand clutching his sword, Isol slowly threaded his way into the hut.
There, he found a woman lying on the ground, a puddle of crimson blood already formed under her body. She laid face-down, her face hidden behind locks of golden hair that looked almost silver in the moonlight. Isol knew who she was.
In a rotting shed, far away from her ancestral lands, he found a dead elf woman. One of the last of her kind. Was she the one crying? he wondered, looking at her body. Or was it someone else? Her friends, perhaps. He didn't know and seeing such a horrible scene only made him feel worse. It made him recall times better left behind.
Then, he heard it again. It was a shrill sound, thoroughly stained with desperation and panic, and it came from the elf woman. Or rather, from behind her.
Gently, Isol turned her around and found the person responsible. In the woman's arms was a red-faced baby. A tuft of blonde hair on their head and a face scrunched in displeasure. The child was screaming their lungs out, desperately calling for attention, for rescue.
Isol wanted them to stop, but he had no idea how. He took of one glove and awkwardly touched the baby's cheek with his finger. Their skin was smooth and warm and incredibly soft. Not sure what to do after this, he just kept staring until he felt something small firmly grab his finger.
The child's golden eyes reflected his own. Isol half-heartedly tried to wriggle himself free, but the child refused to let go. Strangely, though, they finally stopped crying.
"Let go," gently said Isol. "Please."
But the child didn't.
And then, she laughed, and that was the most beautiful sound Isol ever heard in his life. Perhaps, this was the moment when he made his decision.
Slowly, he tried to pry the baby out of her mother's hands, but the woman's cold hands refused to bulge. As he applied more and more force, he suddenly heard a crunch. One after another, Isol had to break the dead mother's finger, so he could hold the child in his arms.
Please, he prayed in his thoughts, please, let her go. I beg you.
Finally, the child was free, already safely cradled in his arms. Looking at her sleeping face, Isol felt the weight on his shoulders slowly fade. "You are," Isol said between gentle sobs as tears went down his face, "so light. And small. And…"
He had no idea why his tears refused to stop, but he fell on his knees, overwhelmed with emotions. "… You smell of sun," Isol smiled at the child in his arms, feeling hopeful for the first time in what seemed like an eternity.
When he managed to regain a semblance of composure, he heard someone call his name. "Isol!" a voice said. "Hey, Isol! Where the hell did you go, man? That's not funny!" That was Ando, searching for him.
"Here," called Isol, urging him to get closer.
"Oh, so you were here, buddy," Ando said as his shoulders slumped down. "If that was some kind of a joke, it wasn't very…" The man instantly stopped the moment he saw the tiny bundle in his friend's arms. "This is…" He searched for a proper word, but Isol said it first.
"An elf child," he said. "I found here out there, in a shed. Her mother," his brows creaked slightly. "She is dead. A stab wound in her stomach. A deep one, too."
"An elf," Ando frowned. "What did she do here of all places?" he asked no one in particular. "So, what are you going to do with the baby?"
"I…" Isol wavered. "I think I'm going to take her with me. She is…" He looked at the girl's sleeping face and felt a smile form on his lips. "She is my daughter." The word felt fresh on his lips. It tasted bittersweet for some reason, but Isol liked the way it sounded. "My precious daughter."
"Well," said Ando. "Does this daughter of yours have a name?"
[] Write-in.
"I see," the man shrugged. "Looks like you're serious about this. Not sure how this is going to work out, but…" Looking Isol in the eyes, Ando smiled brazenly. "I'm sure you'll make it work somehow."
"Thank you," said Isol. His face, however, quickly tightened up. Eyes glued to the crumbling hut in the distance, he spoke: "There's something I need to ask of you, too. Can you gather some firewood for me?"
"For what?" croaked the man. "Our camp isn't that far away, you know? Plenty of fire out there, if you ask me."
"Not for me," explained Isol. "For her," he pointed with his chin at the hut. "Elves burn their dead, right? We should do the same for her. It's the right thing to do, don't you agree?"
"What, you want to arrange her a funeral pyre? For a woman you don't even know?" Ando asked. "No way, man! We'll be sitting ducks out there! You understand that, right?! Look, how about we just bury her in the ground? That works, too."
"For humans," Isol pointed out. "Not elves. We should respect their traditions. Just this once."
"About damn time you suddenly developed a conscience," mumbled Ando. "Look, I think it's a bad idea. The fire will attract the stray bandits like moths. Think about your kid. Do you think you will be able to fight them while carrying her in your arms?"
That argument made Isol waver.
"Look," said Ando. "Sometimes we make choice we are not proud of. You know this better than anyone else. Guys like us? We survive. We don't think about things like pride and honor. We do what we must, when we must. Your misguided desire to honor a woman you know nothing about, who would've probably hated your human guts for nearly exterminating her entire race, can get both of us killed. If it was up to me, I'd have left that dame there. I'm sure wild animals would appreciate the gesture."
[] Ignore. Tell him to prepare the funeral pyre.
[] Compromise. You will bury that woman according to your customs.
[] Listen. There's no helping that woman anymore. It's time to think about the living.