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Chapter One: Motivated by Hate It was a cloudy afternoon as Celeste sat on the broken stone fence playing a mournful melody on her flute. No one lived in that forest anymore… not since… that day… Her long elfin ears sank downward in sorrow as her doleful music stopped and she sat amidst the melancholy silence of the abandoned wood. Her knee-length blonde hair, tied in the back, flowed beside her in the gentle breeze. Every moment in the still wood reminded Celeste of the calm before the storm. She was one hundred years old this year, and it all happened eighty-one years ago. It was a deep wound, never healing even after the passing of over eight decades. It happened a lifetime ago, and yet it was imprinted in Celeste’s memory as if it had been yesterday.
But when she reached it—no, no, Celeste’s mind stopped her sorrowful memory short. She was going to get revenge, and that was all that mattered; she would, as much as possible, forget the scenes she witnessed that day until it was time to exact sweet revenge, and take all her pain and malice out on the one responsible for her involuntary solitude.
Many years she trained to find and kill the demon she sought. Many times she thought she knew where to find her. And many times she was wrong. She almost gave up hope; but she vowed she would find her, kill her, or die trying, and Celeste was not one to forget an oath. Abruptly the requiem came to a stop once more, as Celeste rose from the broken bit of piled stone that still stood from the high castle walls once protecting her kingdom. Sitting and mourning would not get her a single step closer to revenge. So slowly and dejectedly she began walking in the direction of a small human village a little ways out from the forest.
Intrigued, Celeste used cover of interest in some ribbon he was selling to probe him for more information. “Good afternoon, sir,” she said, walking up to him, with the red light of sunset glistening in her hair beautifully. She certainly had the grace and poise of royalty. “Those are beautiful ribbons,” she continued, her voice sounding gentle and sweet, yet only as a covering for something strong and hard. “Good evenin’, missy. Yep, these here are my finest, at least, the finest of what I’ve got left.” “Why, what happened?” The sun disappeared and lamps were lit, and unexpectedly the merchant glanced around as if suddenly afraid of someone hearing. In a hushed tone, he answered her, “The dark elves, ma’am; me and my partner were stupid enough to try an’ sell to ‘em, and they not only killed him, they gave me such a beatin’ I’m lucky to be alive today!” “Oh my!” Celeste gasped. “You are very brave, to go within a mile of those creatures! I’ve heard of some absolutely wretched things they’ve done in the past.” “You probably ain’t heard the half of it,” the merchant said, sounding almost proud of how much he knew of the dirty deeds of the dark elves. “I heard ‘em gloatin’ over this one as I fled. It’s before my time, but you probably were around back then, miss; they say eighty years ago, those same dark elves, led by the monster they still have for a queen, wiped out an entire kingdom in that forest over yonder in a single night. No one survived, and it’s all a burnt graveyard now.” “Oh, how frightful!” Celeste exclaimed, hiding her hatred. “I am traveling much, and all over; do tell me where those menaces are, that I should be able to avoid them!” “Out west,” the merchant said, and pointed. “Past a tall mountain. It’s a barren wasteland back there; but there’s a small hill-sized mountain there that hides a rock openin’ leading down to the tunnels where they live. I’m a-tellin’ you, missy, if you ever see a rock openin’, run for your dear life!” “I will be sure never to go that far!” “Mercy me, I’m afraid I got a bit distracted. Consider the advice a free extra for your purchase… you are going to buy one of these mighty fine ribbons here, aren’t you?” “Of course. And thank you very much for the tip! Hmm, I like this light sage color here… but this red… it’s almost the color of blood…” Involuntarily the sight of blood red sent Celeste’s mind back eighty-one years to continue remembering that which she so desperately wanted to forget. As soon as Celeste reached home, she found the entire village ablaze. Dead bodies littered the ground like so many pebbles tossed aside, and then she saw… her.
Celeste spent the night in that town, and in the morning she bought supplies and set out for a long trek. The traveling merchant was still there, and she avoided him, lest he notice she was headed west. Her journey took her west for many days before she reached the high mountain range she needed to cross. She thought continuously about that ominous day eighty-one years past, in hopes of kindling enough hatred inside of her to sustain her through her journey.
Dead. Dead. And she, then a child, forced to watch her father stabbed through the heart and beheaded. A child forced to see her father’s dead, empty eyes staring back at her as such a vicious creature as his murderer carried his head off as a trophy. It was a sight she would never forget, never, ever. And an event she would make that monster pay for.
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