by MillietheWarrior » 10/02/2011 9:23 PM
“Things change, I suppose,” Prudii responded dryly, patting the giant beast lightly on top of it’s head. Street rumbled a sound that could have resembled a purr, his eyes never leaving Madeline’s form. He watched her sharply, like a predator watches prey, his two tails twitching quietly against the carpet. Prudii snapped his fingers and pointed across the room, opposite of the sofa. Without protest, the giant cat slid away and settled in a graceful heap in front of the fireplace and the roaring fire inside. Prudii made no move to leave the door, standing awkwardly beside it and staring hard at his boots as he listened to Madeline’s story. A small part of him refused to forgive her; it refused to take her excuses, and didn’t want to see the truth or the unbalance in them.
But another part of him wanted to gather her into his arms and show her how much he’d missed her. He was emotionally conflicted, something that hadn’t happened to him since he could remember, but seemed to occur only when Madeline was around. Her words frightened him, surprised him; he’d known about her depression, but he hadn’t thought it was so bad. She’d never let on about it, never said a word to him. But the question was; why? Did she think he’d have killed her? Hurt her? Who or what did she think he was? Maybe she really saw him as the monster he’d been created to be. Maybe she was like everyone else. His gaze sunk back to the floor, and when he spoke, his voice was no more than a hoarse whisper.
“I spent every day -- every single day, Madeline -- wondering what I’d done wrong. What had I done to drive you away? Was it because of what I was? I know you’d never been comfortable with my origins, my age, or anything about me. That’s all cured now, and I’m normal; I won’t age faster than you or anything, but I sometimes wish I did. I wish I was still going to die young, that it’d all be over in a couple of years. But I couldn’t do that to the girls and their families; I won’t make them go through it twice. I really am trash, I suppose. Nothing more than a failed experiment. I was never meant to love, to have a family, and yet, I defied that and did it anyway. It’s probably all my fault, somehow…”
He gasped for breath, his voice cracking and stuttering as he continued on. “You could have told me. You could have given me a clue as to how bad it was. I would’ve stayed, Madeline. I would’ve helped you through it. I-I had no idea it was so bad. You never even said a word, never let on about any of that. Why would you keep something like that from me?” He finally lifted his gaze, harsh, golden eyes focused on her and suddenly blurry with tears and pain. He quickly swiped his arm across his eyes, refusing to let the tears fall. “Do you think I’m so much of a monster that I’d have held any of that against you? That I wouldn’t have helped? I love…I cared about you, Madeline. More than you could ever have imagined. You and the children were my world, and when you left, you took a part of that with you. I was sure it was my fault, that I’d done something wrong, something to chase you away. Virginia turned into a horrible version of me and you and tried to destroy her life the only way she knew how. Paige just stopped talking to her, stopped being so happy, and lost herself in her books and her clothes. You hurt them, probably more than you hurt me. They loved you, Madeline, no matter what you might’ve done or thought about doing. They don’t care. They just wanted their mommy.”
Prudii took a deep, ragged breath, wobbling over to the armchair and sinking down slowly into it. He dropped his head into his hands, groaning behind them. “A part of me wants to forgive you, Madeline. I understand…I-I do. A part of me wants to hate you, to wring your neck and kick you out into the storm. But I can’t.” He croaked the last word like a dying man begging for water, and suddenly lifted his face, lined with edges of sorrow, and years of pain and worry, to watch her with steadily darkening eyes. “God help me, but I want to take you back. And I hate myself for it. I want you to stay, to be my wife again, to love me like you did. I don’t know if you could, or would, or if I could stand that kind of pain. But I want it. I do. I‘m just…I’m afraid you’ll leave again, and Madeline, I can’t take that twice. I can’t, and I won’t. You nearly killed me the first time you left; if you do it again…I won’t survive it.”
I love adventurous tales like that. That uplifting feeling that comes from seeing unknown lands and the knowledge that you came across—nothing can replace it! It opens a path from which self-confidence, experience, and important friendships—from the sharing of life or death situations—are born! But hearing it just isn’t the same. I want to create my own magnificent story!
A great adventure! +Imp. Documents+ +Menagerie+ +Wishlist+ +Journal+