With no wizard’s light to guide us, we ran through the darkness. Occasionally a great leap of fire was reflected on the dark stone, casting an evil red glare across our party, but mostly we moved through a black so deep it seemed a physical force. On we went, stubbing toes and scuffing hands as we ran in pitch black.
“I see light,” the sharp eyed elf yelled. “Daylight!”
We ran faster, though us mere mortals could see naught. I bumped into a man, a common occurrence in this mad dash. But then something amazing happened. I could make out his form. In a few more steps, I too could see the cool blue daylight. We might make it!
There were guards at the entrance, but they were expecting an attack from the outside, not one from within. We swept them away without an injury on our part and pushed out into the open.
Never have I felt so alive as when I breathed in the fresh air! We were out of the mines at last.
But we weren’t safe. We continued to run, run as far from the open well of the mine’s entrance as our legs would carry us.
At last, not able to take another step, we crashed on the shores of a small lake. Dipping into the refreshing waters, we bound our wounds and prepared to move father away before nightfall.
Although this moment’s rest should have seemed a happy moment, it was not. There was a darkness on all of our hearts. How could we go on without him? Was all lost? What were we to do?
But we knew we must go on, and so after a break that was too short, we left the quiet lake and pushed towards the forest below.
Pausing at a small rise, I looked back across the lake at the towering mountains. Dark clouds had moved in, painting the mountains in hues of grey and black. A sudden break let a ray of sun splash across the hills, causing them to burn gold. For a minute my heart rose out of the dark crevasse, were it had been since that fateful bridge, and sang at the beautiful sight. We had hope yet! But then the clouds gathered and the vision was gone.
I turned to follow the others, when…
“Sam.”
Someone called me, perhaps one of the other hobbits.
“Sam, are you ok?”
I looked up and nodded at the figure standing over me.
“Yeah, Mom, fine,” I said.
“Are you sure?” she asked. I nodded. “You’ve been sitting here just staring at the lake and mountains for ten or fifteen minutes now. Daydreaming?”
“Yeah, just thinking about the book I’m reading.”
She smiled. “Perhaps those are the Misty Mountains, right? Come on, let’s go. It’ll be dark soon. Dad’s waiting.”
I stood up and walked towards the car. Before I got in, I paused and looked back at the mountains. Another stray beam of light came out, sparking a golden fire across the landscape. A dragon! The dragon followed us home, burning every village we passed.
At least it did in my head.
— — —
This was written for Sue Vincent‘s weekly #writephoto challenge.
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Yes, you had to have read The Lord of the Rings to get this ;)
Pingback: Dark #writephoto (repost) | Trent's World (the Blog)
Pingback: Photo prompt round-up: Dark #writephoto | Sue Vincent's Daily Echo
Such an imagination!
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I seem to write a lot about kids with huge imaginations. Maybe I’m just seeing my childhhood through rose tinted glasses ;)
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:)
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I got it pretty early on. And of course the dragon was real :-)
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Yes, the dragon had to be real, just like all of the ones I see :)
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Loved LOTR and I got it as soon as I started reading!
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I’m sure any true Tolkien fan saw it right away. Obviously I was like the kid in the story and day dreamed about it all of the time….
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I’m a kid a heart. I enjoy dreaming of other worlds and immersing myself in fantasy stories.
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Me too. It’s the reason I write – my mind is always full of these stories about other worlds, and this is one way to get them out.
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Sure is
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Pingback: Dark – Trent P. McDonald #writephoto | Sue Vincent's Daily Echo
Ha. I thought this had a very “LOTR” feel when I started reading.
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Yep. Not exact, since I was using first person, but then, when we fantasize about being in a fantasy world,isn’t it always in first person? ;)
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What’s the point of using source material if you can’t put your “thumbprint” on it.
Your description of the darkness reminded me of the Biblical “plague of darkness” found in Exodus 10:21-23. Some Jewish scholars thought it wasn’t just the absence of light but that it was tangible.
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I might have heard or read that interpretation of the “plague of darkness” at some point – it sounds familiar.
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I’m sure the interpretation is centuries old, Trent.
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Great the way he brings his reading to life in his imagination.
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That’s part of the power of reading – no movie is as good as the one that goes on in our heads…
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Wonderful Trent. I thought I was reading the chapter of a book for a minute.Excellent.
Hugs
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Thanks David. I was inspired by a chapter in a very good book ;)
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Return of the King would be my guess.
Hugs
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Close. The first book, The Fellowship of the Ring.
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I got it straight away… but love the twist in the tail ;)
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I’m sure any true Tolkien fan would get it right away. At least I hope so, or I made a major mistake! Thanks.
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I can’t see how it would be missed ;)
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