In Latakia, the saying goes, there are two days in every man's life he dreads the most.
One is the day his wife gives birth.
The other, no less feared, is the day the babe opens its eyes...
And they are glowing green.
In the manor of Crosset, one man now lived who embodied the terrifying tale.
Mirram Hild, the Farmer.
Once sure his wife and the babe would live, Farmer Hild resumed his business, ever the stoic chap he was. He'd never sought to know why his seed had produced the only Greeneye in Crosset in two generations. He'd never voiced his fear for the endless misfortune Greeneye children would condemn all that strayed within their sight to. He simply worked the fields, dawn till dusk, six days a week, to feed the wee babe and her three older siblings.
He made love to his wife every weekend. She went on to bear him three more children, prompting Farmer Hild to work harder. He considered his life normal, save for the occasional abnormal day folks would say came with raising a lass with glowing green eyes, but Mirram would say a teenage daughter. Of which he had three, and one a-coming.
One such day began ordinary in mid-April, seven years after the Crosset Famine. Farmer Hild stood before the clerk's table, tucked under the shadow of Crosset Castle's town gate, flanked by his best friend Draken Armorheim, also the Farmer.
For their turn with the clerk, they'd been queuing in the tender spring sun long enough for slobbering lips to run dry of gossip. Castle guards standing sentinel whispering to each other out of the corner of their mouths. Passing castle workers nudging each other and hissing behind their hands, as if one still must read lips with seventeen years' worth of experience.
The Greeneye's father! That him? They say he prayed to Chione for another son. That's why Freda cursed him! Have you seen those cursed eyes? Simply monstrous! Yada yada yada.
Draken also served as the butt for many a local joke.
Dun leave yer sheep with Draken Armorheim. Man had fat little Lord Hadrian on a leash, and the boy escaped!
Come now, boy's a prodigy, they say.
Not if Johnsy caught that wee devil in the first place!
Mirram and Draken tried not to think this was why they were such good friends.
The young clerk, at least, seemed too beleaguered to care, his long golden ponytail lank with sweat, his gray-green silk cloak bundled and wedged to his chair to cushion his spine. One hand supported his heavy head, the other jotted down date and time in his enormous ledger.
"Name and business, whichever of you will go first."
Draken nudged Mirram's shoulder so he edged a half-step forth.
"Mirram Hild, sir. Me son Myron's found apprenticeship."
Mirram produced a folded piece of parchment and smoothed it on the clerk's wooden table. His son's letter of apprenticeship from Yorfus of the blacksmith guild.
The clerk perked up. He gawked at Mirram as if he'd just passed the most brazen round of wind in Lord Crosset's court. Ink dripped from his peacock quill.
"What's your name, again?"
"Mirram Hild, sir."
"Mirram Hild, as in the father of Meya Hild?"
I do have six other children, you know.
Mirram refrained from rolling his eyes with much difficulty. For Freda's sake, what was the problem with these people? He'd produced six perfectly mundane children, yet they still wouldn't stop pointing at that one with glowing green eyes!
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Luminous: Book 1 [Paperback Sample]
FantasíaHere are sample chapters for the paperback version of Luminous: Book One, which will be released on Amazon (via Kindle Direct Publishing) around early October 2024. By purchasing this print version, you will get: - Chapters 0 - 64 of Luminous (Prolo...