βYour hands are shaking,β Yirah said.
Fiddler curled his tremor-ridden hands around his mug of honey brew. Yirah would never describe her mischievous charge as serene, but shaking hands?
They sat in the most relaxing tavern sheβd seen this side of Chron. Vines traveled up the fireplaceβs sides and drooped over a fine mantel. Dying flames struggled to survive within the confines, feeding on more ashes than wood. Even the tables and chairs amplified the calm atmosphere, their backs carved, sanded, and stained a deep, comforting brown.
Fiddler stared at his brew.
βFiddler?β Yirah satβor hoveredβacross from him. As a Spirit Guide, she was unaffected by gravity and floated an inch above her chair.
Fiddler blinked. βHmm?β
βYouβre afraid.β The words sounded strange to her ears. Fiddler had rushed into a number of dangerous situations without the slightest hesitation. Something was wrong. What was she missing?
Fiddler leaned his chair back, balancing on two legs. βIf you had an army obsessed with beheading you, youβd be a little unsteady yourself.β He grinned like a child whoβd stolen a Nymphβs harp. βYouβre suddenly very concerned about me.β
Yirah frowned. βI donβt see how sitting around a table is going to clear a path through Harkβs forces.β
Fiddler sipped his brew. βWe canβt fight through them.β
βObviously. But you still have a plan.β
βObviously,β Fiddler said.
The tavern door opened, sending a burst of snow into the room and distorting her unnaturally slim, semi-transparent features. A soldier stepped out of the flurry and shut the door. Flakes clung to his brows.
Yirah crossed her arms, following him with her eyes. The soldier had probably been pulled from Harkβs army, if his red uniform was any indication. βAnd that plan is?β
βFor me to know and you to find out,β Fiddler said.
Yirah growled. The soldier joined five other companions. All were dressed in red.
Fiddler swirled his brew. βIβm impressed. My passive-aggressive companion managed to find me honey brew during the greatest Plague War since the planet shattered.β
Yirah leaned forward, βrestingβ her forearms on the table. βThereβs more where that came from if youββ
βIβm still not telling,β he said.
Yirah sighed. βYouβre insufferable.β The soldiers leaned close, murmuring. Why were they at the tavern, of all places? Were they after Fiddler? If they wanted him, surely theyβd at least take some precaution to disguise themselves.
βYou chose to be my Guide in the first place.β Fiddler shivered.
The room must be cold. The sensation was like an old acquaintance, unimportant and long forgotten. βItβs been a long ten years, even for a near immortal.β
Snowflakes slipped under the door. Fiddler craned his neck, glancing at them.
βYouβre stiffer than a corpse. You need to relax.β Yirah had long since stifled reactions to the physical world, but this time she nearly yielded to the urge to grasp Fiddlerβs hands and still them.
βI canβt,β he said.
Yirah sighed. Always so concerned about his people. She shook her head, her light hair floating like tendrils of smoke. βYou canβt save them all from death.β
Fiddler had foolishly decided to lead not one but a few hundred families to the Flatlands, where theyβd be safe from Harkβs maniac genocides. Despite Fiddlerβs efforts to evade Harkβs notice, his people were now pinned inside the Woodlands, an army separating them from the freedom and protection the people of the Flatlands offered.
βDeath tends to avoid those I try to save more than those I donβt.β
βYouβre making yourself feel guilty,β Yirah said. Fiddler was too young to understand how much damage caring could wreak.
βThe second their deaths cease to bother me is the moment I strangle my soul with my own hands.β
One of the soldiers shifted, and Fiddler jerked.
Yirah raised an eyebrow.
Fiddler exhaled with an involuntary shudder. βDonβt you find immortality horribly boring?β
βJust because I havenβt diedββ
βFor a few thousand years…β Fiddler interrupted.
βDoesnβt mean I canβt,β she finished with a customary glare.
βYou havenβt told me how.β Fiddler leaned forward, bringing his chair to rest on all four legs. His brew rippled in his trembling hands, so he set it down and clasped them under the table.
What was wrong? The soldiers? If they were after him, they would have come in larger force and not waited to seize him. Fiddler had once tricked his way out of a legion. βIβve told you.β
βYouβve said, and I quote, βWhen I cease being immortal, I die.β Thatβs painfully obvious and terribly vague.β
βI become real again, fool,β she said.
He shifted. βAh.β
Yirah scanned the room again. The soldiers religiously avoided her gaze.
βWhy did you do it?β Fiddler asked.
βDo what, exactly?β She examined the bar. Barrels of brew covered the wall. A lone bartender cleaned mugs, whistling a merry tune.
βTurn spirit. Cut yourself off from the world.β
Yirah paused. βYou remember Arianna?β
Fiddler leaned back, folding his arms behind his head. βShe was a nice lady.β
βShe stabbed you,β Yirah said flatly. She didnβt want to remember that night. Sheβd worried Fiddler had lost so much blood that he wouldnβt wake up.
βIβll admit, it was a slight error in judgment.β He tapped his mug. βBut she was a good kisser.β
βBut she hurt you,β Yirah said.
βI think youβre jealous.β
Yirah glared at him. βShe controlled you.β
βI suppose.β
Yirah shook her head. βThatβs what people do to other people. Control them.β She raised an arm. βThis way, they cannot.β Fiddler was born safe. He didnβt understand being weak, manipulated. Used for some twisted pleasure like shoving a sparrow in a falconβs cage and watching it try to escape its hunter. Broken memories, stale but far from inconsequential, still lingered in a dark corner of her mind, where they should have turned to dust.
βThere is good in it too.β Fiddler shrugged. βYou canβt deny you miss touching another person. A hug from a mother. A friendly spar with a colleague.β
A pang tugged at her heart. βYou surrender yourself to those whoβd use you. Better to strangle your own soul than let another do it, hmm?β
The door opened again, and another man stepped inside.
Yirah shot to her feet. The manβs clothes were cut in the same minimal, square fashion of the soldiers, except bleached white. He raised his head, settling back into the posture of a king, and surveyed the room like he owned it.
One would expect nothing less from Hark.
Chairs scraped across the floor as the soldiers rose.
βFiddler. Go,β she said. βTheyβllββ
βWhen I die youβll be free to pick another master,β Fiddler said.
Another master?
βFiddler!β Hark spread his arms wide. βGlad you could make it.β
Fiddler fumbled to unbuckle his weapons belt. He placed it on the table. βYou need to leave.β He wouldnβt look her in the eye.
Yirah watched his shaking hands. She lowered her voice. βYouβre letting them capture you.β
Hark approached the table.
Fiddler swallowed. He wouldnβt meet her eyes.
They couldnβt take him. A shadow fell across the table. A soldier motioned for him to stand.
βItβs my choice.β Fiddler lifted his empty hands.
βFiddler! What are youββ
The soldier bent Fiddlerβs hands behind his back and slammed him onto the table.
She turned away. Sounds of the scuffle reached her ears, but it didnβt matter. It couldnβt touch her.
He was just another master. Sheβd had many.
She flinched all the same.
***
He was still unconscious.
Yirah hovered outside Fiddlerβs cell. The stony room held darkness like a cup holds water. A candle a few cells down fought valiantly to stay alight, its wick almost gone.
He was an idiot. She understood now. It was an exchange. Fiddlerβs life for his people. Harkβs army had already retreated, giving Fiddlerβs people a clear route to freedom. Sheβd checked while he was asleep.
A moan struggled out of her charge.
βIβve known mortals for a long time, and yet, youβve managed to surprise me,β she said.
βI surprise myself sometimes.β Fiddler sat up, holding his head.
βYou stretch the limits of human stupidity.β
Fiddler stood and stumbled against the wall. He eased forward, reaching for the cell bars. A little blood leaked down his face from a cut on his scalp. βYouβre angry.β
Yirah glanced down. Her dark-red dress flickered in a nonexistent breeze like it always did when she got mad. She willed it to still. βSimply surprised.β
βThis was the only way they would leave them alone,β he said. βTheyβve retracted their forces, haven’t they?β
Yirah looked down.
βThey have.β Fiddler gripped the bars.
βThe moment the axe fallsββ It hit her like a weight. They were going to kill Fiddler. Steal him away from her forever.
She pushed the thought away. βThe moment the axe falls, theyβll be back.β
βThatβs enough time for them to evacuate.β
But Fiddler would be dead.
Yirah turned away. Fiddler was so blasted noble. He was reckless, but he didnβt deserve this.
A guard entered the hallway, not giving a second glance to Yirah. He could see her, but paid no mind. She couldnβt affect the world where fate played like a schoolboy.
Keys jingled by his side. Keys that could free Fiddler.
She shook her head. She had vowed never to go back, but something had crept into her heart, staining it with its messy, warm fingers. Compassion?
βItβs too late now.β Fiddler sighed. βI had to save them.β
Yirahβs throat closed. βYou care so much for those who wonβt remember your name.β
βThey donβt have to.β
She shook her head again.
βThis is why you chose me, right? You knew who I was. You knew Iβd make the right choice.β A note of pleading threaded his tone, like he needed her to believe in him.
Yirah couldnβt watch him die. She lowered herself onto the cobblestone.
The guard drew closer. The world blurred like she was stepping out of a waterfall. Gravity glued her feet to the floor, and she swayed under the unfamiliar weight. Her hair, no longer airy, pressed against the back of her neck.
She brushed the strands away from her face, feeling them pull through her fingers. She inhaled, and her lungs expanded for the first time in centuries. Her skin reflected the candlelight instead of letting it pass through.
It was just like the day sheβd found the enchanter and begged him to erase the invisible fingerprints of the man she should have trusted most from her skin.
It had been so long.
The guard passed her. She reached out, sliding the key ring off his belt. The cold metal bit her palm and she almost dropped it.
βYirah, please, Iβm sorry.β
She turned. Fiddler eagerly met her gaze, still searching for approval.
She inserted the key and twisted it. Fiddler blinked when he heard the click.
Her feet went numb. She was fading already. She rested her hand on Fiddlerβs. It was warm. Real. Chills pricked her spine.
She swung the door open with a loud creak.
Fiddlerβs face went slack.
Yirah wove her fingers between his.
βYou canβtβ¦β Fiddler started. βYouβreββ
βI told you.β The world clouded. Her legs had disappeared.
This was it.
βWill you be back?β He looked her up and down, refusing to blink lest she vanish.
Yirah shook her head. βThis is my choice.β
Heβd be safe. Heβd return to leading the people heβd rescued.
She smiled.
And disappeared.
For a moment, she could still see. Fiddler stared at his hands, opening and closing them like heβd never realized they worked.
They trembled no longer.
He studied the place where sheβd stood before he walked out of the cell.
He was free.
The last thing she remembered wasnβt a sight, but a feelingβlike someone had removed every stimulation except a warmth she almost recognized as her heart.

A long time ago on a hill not so far away, Gabrielle Pollack fell in love. Not with ice cream or cats (though those things are never far from her side) but with storytelling. Since then, sheβs been glued to a keyboard and is always in the midst of a writing project, whether a story, blog post, or book. She was a reader before becoming a writer, however, and believes paradise should include thick novels, hot cocoa, a warm fire, and βDo Not Disturbβ signs. Her favorite stories include Brandon Sandersonβs Mistborn saga and Nadine Brandesβs Out of Time trilogy.
As those who know her will confess, Gabby is a whole lot of weirdness packed into one INFP. Sharp objects, storms, and trees are her friends, along with stubborn characters and, on occasion, actual people. When sheβs not writing, sheβs shooting arrows through thickets and subsequently missing her target, jamming on the piano, and pushing her cat off her keyboard. She hopes to infuse her fiction with honesty, victory, and hope, and create stories that grip readers from the first page to the last. Her other goals include saving the world and mastering a strange concept called adulthood.
Ahhhhh! That was so beautiful! And painful! I have no other words.
Thank you!
Wow. This was so beautiful, Gabby! Amazing job.
Thanks for reading. π
Awwwww my heart. <3
This was stunning, Gabby!
Aw thanks! I enjoyed this story.
That was so phenomenal I don’t know what to say.
Lip-biting, leaning forward, scanning lines quick kind of reading.
Beautiful.
And I didn’t see the twist of him turning himself in coming — that part really got me.
And the names are really cool.
*hopefully* Any chance there are more stories in their world? or about Fiddler?
Thanks for your awesome comment. I’m glad you enjoyed it.
I didn’t create any more, though I suppose there is always a possibility that I’ll write more someday. π
That, quite simply, was amazing. Steady prose, entertaining characters, and a fascinating world; all of them together make a magnificent story. Now I just wish it was an actual book…
Why thank you. π I bet Fiddler would love it if I created a book about him. π
Aww!! I loved that!! It was so sweet! And there were some excellent lines that drew such vivid images. I would love to see more of these characters and this story!
Thank you for reading! π
GAH! *hugs self and sniffles happily* I love it. It’s lovely.
Yay! π Thanks for reading π
I was not expecting something like this… wow. Just wow.
I’m glad it surprised you. XD Thanks for reading!
Thanks for breaking my heart π </3 But seriously, Gabby, you're an incredible writer, and this was a poignant, beautiful story!
Welcome. π Aww thanks π
My heart… oh gosh
Great work. π
π Thanks! I’m glad it touched your heart.
The story was absolutely touching! great job Gabby! How did you come up with such an amazing story? Your a great writer, I hope to see more of your work.
I’m glad you enjoyed it. π Thanks for reading!
*Sniff* Poor Yirah⦠So touching. I hope you learn from this, Fiddler!
I know. :(::: Thanks for reading!