Flash Fiction Challenge: No Secret Safe
This week, we had to randomly roll a conflict and centre our story around it. I rolled 'dark secret revealed' and this is what came out. Once again, I had no idea what to write when I sat down to
write this, but once the first sentence had arrived, the story followed.
No Secret Safe
The first secret was revealed at dawn. Sigrun sweated,
hearing her littlest sister deliver it to her father’s fiercest friend and most
deadly foe, felt her stomach grow cold. Now Valgerd had what he needed.
Sigrun stood a jug of mead
on the tray. She did not know when her father and Valgerd’s friendship had
soured; she only knew it had. She could mark the day Heldar started keeping
secrets from his friend. They had hoped, but not known Ieitha would find her
gift so soon, or that she would be alone when she revealed the vital thread. Sigrun
shivered as Ieitha’s piping tones filled the hall.
“The one you seek. She hides
in shadow, but revels in the light. She will put a torch to the darkest parts
of your soul and reveal all.”
Valgerd had betrayed them,
but only father knew. He had explained to Sigrun when he’d rejected Valgerd’s
bid for her hand.
“No daughter of mine will
give him the power.”
Sigrun had been hard put to
hide her relief. She’d heard stories of Valgerd’s lovemaking, and
long-suspected the cruelty rotting at his core. Valgerd and her father had taken
their rite of passage in the mountains, journeying there together, but only her
father had returned whole, and he had not suspected Valgerd could be touched.
Not by something he had shaken off with a mere shrug of the heart.
Heldar had not known that Valgerd
had no heart, that Valgerd had not grown into the man his boyhood had
promised—that the salamander had swept the boy away in a night beyond Valgerd’s
wildest fantasies, bringing him to manhood and consummating her success by
leaving him in an agony for more.
And she’d done something
else as well. Salamanders—slimy by nature, subtle infectors of the mind and
will… and other parts. Sigrun had heard rumours, and they were not pretty.
Sigrun laid bread and cheese
beside the jug. She knew the salamanders well. She’d been fighting them all her
childhood dreams. For her the gift of sight had manifested as early as
Ieitha’s, but not as something to reveal what others needed to know. No, Sigrun
waged war in her sleep, slipping beneath the dream shadow to follow the trails
left by their enemies, directing her father and his men to their prey. In her
own way, Sigrun had more blood on their hands than they.
Ieitha could not have known
the one Valgerd sought, that the salamanders suspected her existence, or the existence
of one like her and raged to unveil them. As she listened to her little sister’s
first prophesy, she sweated and she smiled. Ieitha’s sight was strong—Sigrun indeed
hid in shadow, and she loved the light more fiercely than life itself, or she
would not do what she did so well. Her father knew it, and her mother knew
it—but the warriors did not, and therein lay a portion of the bitterness
feeding Valgerd’s treacherous heart.
Valgerd felt he had been
Heldar’s friend long enough that the chieftain should keep nothing from him.
Heldar had not become chieftain by giving away more trust than he had to, and
his secrecy had kept Sigrun safe, giving his tribe the edge against their
hereditary foe.
Valgerd would feed them all
to the salamanders, but only if he caught Ieitha’s thread. For their survival,
the tribe needed him to notice it, and he did. The big man crouched in front of
the three-year-old, placing a hand on either shoulder.
“It will do you no good to
harm me,” Ieitha said, still in the grip of her gift, terror in her eyes, but
serenity in her face and voice.
Sigrun knew, as she tucked
the knife behind the loaf and hefted the tray, that Ieitha’s gift would eclipse
her own. The thought made her fear for her sister’s life in spite of Valgerd’s
next words
“I will not harm you, little
one.”
“Liar! You would harm us all
if you knew how.” Ieitha’s voice was losing its serenity, but sounded much
older than her three years. Abruptly, the child stilled, and her voice became
calm once more. “She will kill you, you know.”
Valgerd glanced nervously
around the hall, but the few warriors eating there appeared to be deep in
conversation, and Sigrun had held herself just inside the kitchen door. The
warrior glared at the child.
“I think you should still be
abed,” he snarled, and Ieitha stared at him wide-eyed.
“She will sear your soul.”
“Who?” Valgerd shouted, as Sigrun
stepped into the room.
“Uncle Valgerd,” she said,
but he ignored her, ignored the warriors shifting carefully in their seats,
preparing their weapons.
“Who?” he roared, shaking
Ieitha so hard her head snapped back and forth, shaking her so hard she fell
out of the trance and began to wail.
“Mama!”
Valgerd relaxed.
“Your mama’s no threat to
me,” he said, and seemed to recognise that Ieitha was no longer a seer.
“Mama!” Ieitha shrieked
again, beside herself in the way that only toddlers can be.
Sigrun caught a whiff of
heat in the air.
“Your mama’s long gone,
little one,” Valgerd said. “She died abirthing you.”
With a twist of vindictive
acid, he added, “You killed your mama, and now she can’t answer.”
It was a lie, and Sigrun breathed
easier that Ieitha was no longer entranced. The second secret was safe a little
while longer.
“Mama!” Ieitha screamed, and
Sigrun tossed the tray to one side.
The disrespect Valgerd
showed for Heldar’s long-departed wife and the child she had been forced to
abandon revealed the rot. A frisson of power flew across Sigrun’s skin and the
long-house doors slammed opened, sheared from their hinges.
Sigrun swept Ieitha from Valgerd’s
grasp and kept running. She had learnt to hide in shadow and revel in light at
her mama’s knee, back when Valgerd had been her father’s friend, but what mama
could ignore her child?
Valgerd’s scream revealed
all.
“Dragon!”
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