In case it hasn't been realized by now, I have an affinity with a  certain 
vampire. This is, again, a small slice taken from said vampire's  2000 years 
worth of mostly unpublished life. It has also occurred to me  that if I'm going 
to continue writing these then maybe they should have a  name of their own... 
and since they're written in whatever order I feel  like and can be read the 
same way I hereby dub them, with a grateful nod  to Marcus Aurelius for the 
inspiration, as "Mediations in No Particular  Order".  
The fine print is Ms. Rice's, as always. This work is mine.  
Spoilers: TVL, with some exceptions. You might call it an AU - I  know some 
of the details aren't right. I wrote it this way because it  worked for me but 
I do know the details differ from what is in TVL. (And I  suppose it might be 
worth mentioning that I haven't read, and don't intend  to, anything beyond 
TotBT so you don't need to expect anything related to  MtD, Pandora or TVA.) 



Meditations in No Particular Order 
by Ilah Sef
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED])  


*****  
into the web of eternity 
slip the grains of time  -


I have never before realized how silent the night is. How utterly still  and 
devoid of all of the sounds and bustle and countless things which we  take for 
granted in the light of the day. In the night, as the world  sleeps, one 
might stand within the cocoon of silence and truly come to  believe that one's 
heart is the only one which beats within all the quiet  lands of the world.  
I owned this house, once.  
Admittedly, it is not a large house. Nothing grand, nothing at all like  the 
estates of my father. Yet it has been comfortable and more than  sufficient 
for a single man and a bare handful of servants to care for it  during my 
frequent travels. My home, my space, filled with momentos of  things I have 
seen and 
touched, places I have been, my belongings and all  I have, until now, held 
precious.  
How utterly hollow it all seems now, and yet... and yet some part of me  
cares for it still.  
My fingertips brush across the crackling surface of papyri, over wax  tablets 
where my hastily jotted and much erased notes are dug with messy  haste into 
their substance. Over the worn wood of the table with its ink  stained 
surface, where I have sat so many other nights beneath the light  of candle and 
smoky 
lamp, heedless of the decline of day as the words race  from mind to 
fingertip and out, through pen, to the sheets beneath. Never  a thought I gave 
to the 
table itself and yet now I find so much merely in  the touch of it - the nub 
of the grain, and there, a crack, tracing out to  the nick in the corner where 
it had been struck against the doorframe when  it was first moved into the 
room. The slick feel of dried ink, where it  has obscured the grain of the 
wood. 
A hundred memories, a thousand  sensations, all in the touch of a fingertip.  
each grain a crystal note... 
each note a haunted  song...  
So many sensations from so many things, until I know the effort to  disregard 
them, to appear as I once was, has left a crease between my  brows and a 
tightness to my mouth that only increased their exclamations  over my health 
when 
I appeared upon the doorstep early in the dusk hours  of the night before. And 
what an uproar! To be reduced to pounding my fist  upon the door of my own 
home until my man came running, and then one might  have thought the very world 
had ended for the cry and wailing that arose  when they beheld me there, 
unwashed, in dirt streaked stolen clothes. So  much bustle, the candle lights 
bright in my eyes, their voices too loud  and too harsh upon my ears. 
Exclamations 
of surprise, of dismay, of joy. I  had been gone so long this time, where had 
I been, what had befallen me?  So thin and so pale - was I ill? So many fell 
ill in the outer provinces.  A physician should be called, a bath and a meal 
for the master, clean  clothes and all of the joyous civilized things that I 
had 
been without for  too long.  
I had been overwhelmed and reeling... and saddened. I wasn't sure what  I had 
hoped, coming home. I must go on to Egypt, I already knew that, with  my 
maker's voice ringing through my fretful daytime dreams to drive me on.  But I 
could not do it in the vagabond state I was in, and why not return  home? Where 
all of my worldly possessions were, where I might find all of  the things I 
needed and then set out again in the manner in which I was  accustomed. It 
seemed 
so simple but I had never stopped to think of what  'home' might now mean.  
Walking into this house I had discovered myself a stranger in another  man's 
home.  
I let the papyri fall from my fingers, step away from the table. All of  my 
work, all of my writing... what mattered it now? I had taken the best  of it, 
bundled it up and sent it along to those of my acquaintances who  might make 
use of them. I had dismissed the servants, every last one -  written them such 
letters as would see them to easily finding another  position and explained, 
haltingly, that my health no longer allowed me to  keep their services, or the 
home, or even to stay in the city. Tomorrow  they would come to collect the 
things within the house, to sell them all  and the house itself. All of my 
things, all of the memories... gone. Part  of another life, one I no longer 
have a 
part in.  
I might make another life. A new start, a clean slate, begun anew  without 
any of the encumbrance of this former life. In a way I look  forward to it, for 
life flows through my veins as it has not done in years  and all of the 
unknown eternity stretches before me like countless sand  beneath my feet. Yet 
at 
the same time it saddens me to let go of all I  have known and loved.  
ringing soft within 
he hallowed halls of  memory  
The low chair creaks softly as I lower myself to it, a sound I have  grown 
accustomed to over the years. The latrunculi board remains as I had  left it 
before my last journey, the game set upon it a puzzle I had turned  my mind to 
solving whenever the mood struck me. To look at it now is to  look at it 
through 
new eyes - in an instant I have the answer that has  eluded me for so long 
and reach out to slide one of the polished glass  pieces across the inlaid 
surface. Victory in four moves, the eagle  captured, the legion in chaos. 
Simple, 
elegant, and new.  
Yet no matter how many times I repeat it, a part of me mourns what is  lost. 
Yes, it is a grand thing to be able to look at it and see it anew -  but what 
of all of the pleasant hours spent studying, first from one angle  then 
another, testing each possible move within my mind's eye before ever  reaching 
for a 
piece? Shall I never do so again? Shall I launch myself,  adrift within this 
new life, no longer even to enjoy the past times I once  found pleasure in?  
Such simple things to bring it to rest within my heart. When the  servants 
would have brought food I could not bear it; I made them take it  away. The 
smell of the things - all dishes I had once enjoyed - were  unchanged and yet 
impossibly different. I knew the smell for what it was,  roasted fowl; yet it 
was 
heavy and cloying as it had never been before,  until the smell alone brought 
gorge to my throat. Even the fruits were  impossible, though the sharp 
freshness of their smell was pleasant. I had  taken one up in my hand and split 
the 
skin with the blade of a small  knife. The scent was ecstasy, a treat of the 
sense, but I could not even  bring the juice soaked blade to my lips. Such 
things were no longer for  me. Never again to taste of food or wine, to feel 
the 
warmth of sun, to  see the blue of the sky. Never again to live a life as other 
men.  
to soothe the spinner at her loom 
to troubled restless  sleep.  
My hands tremble as I blink back the burning warmth of tears. Why am I  
mourning this death when all of a new life is mine for the taking? Yet a  man 
should not go to his death unmourned and I have neither wife nor child  to 
bewail 
my passing. No family to care and none shall take offerings to  the temple to 
mark this loss. The tears fall, splashing hot against my  skin, dropping with 
brilliant red dashes against the pale stone of the  latrunculi board.  
Even my tears are no longer my own. I brush them away and as I sit,  
drifting, upon the silence of the night I mourn the loss of the man that I  was 
and 
wonder what life, of the myriad glittering threads spread before  me, shall 
become the web of my future. 

End. 




 (http://www.tc.umn.edu/~pres0049/Storypage.html) 


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