Stille Nacht

Suggested Listening: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EwlFOx12Nzs


Stille Nacht

Someone had thrown a switch.

Turned off the music, the noise, the shoppers, the kids, the Santas with bells on every street corner, the lights stretched from building to building across the once-busy streets.

Now the world was silent, dark, save the gentle breaths of falling snow and the few street lamps flickering and the occasional red light swaying in the breeze. The crowds had disappeared, gone home to await Christmas morning with family, with loved ones.

Shoulders quivering under her jacket, Mathilda shifted the bouquet of white roses to her other elbow. A small velvet box nestled in her pocket, a silver cylinder in the other.

Loved ones. She exhaled gently, a cloud of white smoke billowing into the frosty air in front of her. Miguel was married, his house barely big enough for his immediate family’s Christmas, much less a tag-along aunt. Kevin and Raul tried to include her sometimes, but she always seemed to wind up as a third wheel attached by pure charity when they clearly wanted to enjoy the holidays by themselves. Emily made sure she didn’t wind up strung out on the floor of her tiny bedroom in a drug-induced haze, but with the redhead’s promotion, her working hours had increased exponentially, leaving little time to check on the magic-less pixie.

She only had one “loved one” left. The love of her life.

A flood of memories painted a small smile on her lips, like a toymaker painting on the features of a delicate china doll. Mathilda’s hand found a gold locket hanging at her chest. A rose was etched into one side, her initials intertwined with Mariah’s on the other. It was the first Christmas the two had spent together--a chance meeting in a small town on the Spanish coast, a chance meeting that lead to a week of smiles, fiery kisses, cool touches, and cheap wine. A chance meeting that lead to the best eight years of Mathilda’s life.

Mathilda looked up to a snowdrift blowing off of a rooftop overhead. It swirled into a vague loop-de-loop that reminded her of a white headscarf before slipping off into the night. A mental photograph, a faded Polaroid from a box somewhere she rarely looked, shuffled to the surface--Mariah grinned from the memory, a silken scarf white as snow wrapped around her raspberry curls. They’d gone to Russia for Christmas that year, invaded Kai’s home at Tala’s request. The two were adopting a baby together and wanted a few feminine touches for the nursery. They adopted a girl, named her Miesha after Tala’s mother, if she remembered. She and Mariah had gone shopping for a Christmas present for the baby girl--Mariah had picked up the scarf and fell in love with it. Mathilda couldn’t say no to that grin, never had been able to. Tala said it was a good look for her, and meant it. For once.

The cylinder in her pocket weighed against her hip as she walked. She slipped a hand in with the weighty object, her fingers caressing a polished ebony handle, a silver barrel, a gentle curve in the trigger guard. Mathilda closed her eyes and took a deep breath of the frigid night air. She’d found the gun in a box of Mariah’s when they moved in together, as a Christmas present to them both. They’d paused unpacking and laid together on the mattress, still lying uncovered on the floor, as Mariah explained the significance of the weapon.

“My great grandmother got it as a gift from a British merchant, when we were still allowed to go all the way to the river. He gave it to her to protect herself, and her baby, until he came back to get them, to take them away.” She stroked the handle thoughtfully, the tips of her fingers just barely brushing the wood. “He never came back. No one knows what happened. But my grandmother got the gun when she married--her mother said to her, ‘I hope you never need this, but if you are ever desperate to escape, this will give you one chance. One chance only. Use it wisely.’ My grandmother passed it to my mother, who passed it to me. After she shot herself, of course.” She laughed bitterly. “Only after she’d used her one shot. Selfish bitch.”

Reluctantly, Mathilda retracted her hand as the memory slipped away. The bouquet of white roses shifted hands a second time, and she pushed her other hand into her pocket. Velvet met her fingertips, almost leaping into her touch. She curled her fingers around the ring box, her frozen smile taking on a melancholy cast. She’d hoped to propose with the ring. Her grandmother had once told her that the number seven was a blessed number, the number of completion, so what better day to propose than their seventh anniversary? They already loved each other more than they could stand sometimes, and had gone on more “trial honeymoons” than they bothered to count. Why not make it official?

But then the diagnosis, and the chemo, and the long stays in the hospital with cheesecake and blackberry smoothies because that’s all Mariah would eat, and the midnight conversations when the pain got too bad, and it had never seemed like the right time to ask.

Mathilda remembered the funeral as though it had been only that morning.

Another holiday season, one that hadn’t nearly enough silver bells or angels singing or joy to the world, only too many silent nights. All of their friends had huddled together around a hole in the frozen earth, tears stinging eyes and chilling faces as Mariah was lowered into the ground. No songs, no eulogy, no fanfare. What could one say or sing to immortalize a life that had done the job for itself already?

People visited at important days for a while--her birthday, Mariah’s birthday, Christmas, Valentine’s Day--but one by one, they moved on. They had lived for more than the bright, witty Chinese girl with gorgeous gold eyes and hair that smelled like cherry blossoms and strawberry milkshakes and wonderful days, and they’d continue to live. Miguel had children, Emily worked her way up the scientific ladder, Kevin and Raul found each other. Miesha started school and outgrew the nursery Mariah and she had helped decorate, Kai and Tala fell into the roles of parents like they’d done it all their lives. Which, in a way, they had.

The last street light flickered somewhere behind her. A wrought iron gate, frosted over in delicate, lacy patterns, offered entrance to a field of tombstones. Mathilda shifted the bouquet again and drew a key from a string around her neck, her fingers cold on the skin protected by her coat. The gate squeaked in mournful welcome as it swung inward, dislodging a blanket of snow from the ground beyond.

Past the Jewish plots, turn right at the Catholics, into the newer graves, left at the single father with four children who were all killed in a car accident. “Merry Christmas,” she whispered, her voice hoarse and scratchy. Must be getting a cold. Oh well.

There she was--an angel, arms flung to heaven and skirt spinning outward as if frozen in frenzied, joyful dance. Kai and Tala had funded the memorial, saying it was the least they could do as a final Christmas present to their child’s godmother. Miesha had been six at the time, just old enough to sniff appropriately and wonder what was going on and why was everyone dressed in black and crying at Christmas.

“Merry Christmas, darling,” she whispered to the statue, kneeling in front of the angel girl’s toes and laying the roses on the ground in front of the pedestal. Fingers numb with cold, she gently brushed away the snow off the nameplate.

Mariah Yin
1981-2008
The brightest angel on Earth

She pulled the gun out of her coat pocket and laid it on her knee. The ring box followed suit, placed gently on the statue’s pedestal and flipped open, revealing a simple silver band, a sapphire set in a delicate braid. “I never got a chance to ask you,” she whispered conversationally, sitting back on her heels and fingering the trigger. “And I guess it doesn’t matter much right at this moment, as you’re dead and I’m not, but we’ll be together in a minute and I wanted to ask you now, so you have time to think it over.” Mathilda hefted the pistol, cradling the barrel in her left hand. “I love you so much, Mariah. More than anyone I’ve ever known. You are all I’ve ever wanted, and the only person I want to spend eternity with. So, on that note, Mariah Yin, would you marry me?”

She raised the gun to her temple.
-x-x-x-
“No, no, no, no! Didn’t you listen when I told you to live your life?! You bitch, you’re not allowed to come join me for another fifty years!”

Mariah tried to tug the gun down from her lover’s temple, but as a spirit, she could do relatively little. “Come on, Emily, where are you?! Argh!”

Mathilda closed her eyes, finger curled around the antique pistol’s trigger. “Think quickly, love. I’ll be there in a minute,” she murmured, her voice barely audible.

“Yes! If it will keep you from killing yourself, then yes! Most emphatically yes!”

The living woman’s finger started to press inwards. In a fit of desperation, Mariah pushed at the gun and flung her semi-existent arms around Mathilda’s neck, pushing her lips to living flesh in a cheap imitation of kisses gone by. She hoped that it was just enough.

“Mathilda? Mathilda! Mathilda!”

Mariah pulled away to see her lover’s burgundy eyes wide open in disbelief. The gun lowered slowly to the woman’s knee. One hand brought fingertips to Mathilda’s lips, touching gently to preserve what she thought she could have only imagined. Beyond her shoulder, Mariah could see flashlights combing the dark cemetery, could hear multiple voices--many familiar to her--calling Mathilda’s name. “YES! She’s here! Over here, with me,” the ghost screamed, hoping by some Christmas miracle that she would be heard.

The trigger clicked. A split second later, the pin clicked forward, the primer exploded, a small lead ball pushed into her brain, ripping apart neurons and synapses in a spatter of blood and grey matter.

Mariah’s shoulders slumped, blinking as though she had tears to stave off. “Merry Christmas, sweetie.”

Author's Note: I could've tacked on a semi-sweet ending, but I liked this better. You can imagine a happy-ish ending if you want, though.

Happier holiday stories will come. I'm planning a 12 days of Christmas thing. Yummy. :)

Anything But A Dragonslayer

“I can’t kill dragons!”
“But you will kill dragons!”
The poor thing was dying.
Much as Hiccup hated to say it, that was the sad truth of the matter. It was young, and dying, and Hiccup couldn’t help.
The hatchling had been left at Helheim’s Gate when the dragons fled the destruction of their island, its wings crushed beyond healing by a falling rock. Hiccup could manage a repair for a small piece of dragon mechanics, but not a whole wing. Definitely not two.
No one would have found the baby if Hiccup hadn’t come in search of decent thinking room. The grotto had been that spot before, but then Astrid had shown the others where it was so they could find him if they got worried for his sanity, and now whenever they wanted to talk to him (which was, surprisingly, a lot of the time), they could disturb him at leisure.
No one knew he had come to the nest again. His father would call it unhealthy but be ultimately unsure of how to deal with the situation. Astrid would put another guard schedule on him, if not demand that he stay within her sight at all times. He almost died here, after all, and had lost part of himself trying to save his family, human and otherwise, when he wasn’t sure he could save himself. It was more than the foot, although he missed that, too. It was the piece of him that loved to run, even when it was borne of necessity. The piece that loved to climb the tree behind his house, because it was the closest he had come to flying before Toothless. The piece that loved to feel his toes pushing against the pedal of Toothless’s saddle. The place he’d lost that part was the only place he could remember what it felt like to have it.
Toothless curled around the maimed hatchling, his tail bumping gently against Hiccup’s knee. A sympathetic whine drummed from his throat. “I know, Toothless,” Hiccup sighed, absently stroking the baby dragon’s head.
He knew what had to be done. He didn’t like it--Thor Almighty, he hated the very thought--but leaving the defenseless thing to die by starvation on its own was just cruel. He’d gone over the options a thousand and one times, and it was the only decent thing to do.
Hiccup looked up from the sickly blue head. Toothless’s bright green eyes softened--he knew Hiccup’s opposition to the practice, the art, of dragon killing. He had seen his reluctance the first time they met face to face. But making death come quickly for the little one was only fair. Only merciful. And if Hiccup was anything, he was merciful.
“I bet you miss your mom, huh?” Hiccup’s thumb stroked the ridge above the baby’s eye. He sighed. “I miss mine, that’s for sure.”
Toothless nudged Hiccup’s back with his tale. He hated seeing the boy he loved so upset. But as the three cripples sat there together, Hiccup fell into a moody silence, each breath coming like a heavy thought.
Hiccup shifted his hand to Toothless’s tail. “It’s getting late, isn’t it?”
Toothless growled sadly but took the hint, nuzzling the tiny dragon’s limp wings one last time before shuffling to his feet and moving a respectful distance away. He watched Hiccup slip his knife out of his belt, holding it carefully as though he were about to take his own life rather than the young one’s.
“I’m sorry,” Hiccup whispered, shifting the baby to its side and positioning the knife for a mortal blow. The small creature whimpered feebly as the cold steel brushed his underbelly. “Odin,” he choked, eyes squeezing shut. He knew he had to do it, he knew it was the only decent thing to do, but he wasn’t a murderer! He--
The knife pulled back before he let himself think about it, and plunged into the small creature’s heart. It gurgled once before giving up.
Hiccup opened his eyes a crack. The hatchling laid on the rocks of the island shore, limp and unmoving. Blood trickled from the wound and stained the boy’s fingers a deep red--it never failed to amaze him how dark dragon blood was. Much darker than human blood, a substance with which he was all too well acquainted.
A nudge to his shoulder tugged him out of his thoughts. He turned and saw Toothless staring mournfully at him. The dragon nudged the baby onto its stomach again and rolled a rock from nearby to its head. Hiccup caught on and wordlessly began piling stones around the tiny corpse, creating a small memorial to one who hadn’t escaped at all. Suddenly, he felt both very lucky and very guilty all at once.
“I didn’t deserve to make it,” he whispered to Toothless, still on his knees next to the small funeral monument.
Toothless growled and nipped at Hiccup’s shoulder. Hiccup winced but didn’t try to move away. “I know, sorry.” Toothless nudged him again, catching a fold of Hiccup’s tunic in his teeth and pulling him up.
The metal foot clicked on the latch as he swung onto Toothless’s back--a move so habitual it was like breathing now.
He left a little more of himself under that pile of rocks.
-x-x-x-
“Hiccup!”
Astrid tackled him at a full run as he dismounted in front of his house. “Oof-- Astrid, what--”
She hugged him tighter and buried her nose in his hair. “Don’t you ever run off on me like that again! Where the hell were you--you weren’t in the grotto or anywhere and your dad didn’t know where you’d gone and we were so worried and what the hell did--”
“I killed a dragon, Astrid,” he said quietly.
She paused mid-rant, her mouth clicking shut while she digested the information. “Hiccup, that dragon was a monster, not like Toothless or--”
“No. Not the big one. A little one, just a little baby Deadly Nadder.”
“Oh.” Her face softened and warmed like butter left on a windowsill, as did her embrace. “I’m sure there was nothing else you could have done.”
“Its wings had been crushed,” he said, his voice dropping in volume with every word he spoke. “It couldn’t fly, couldn’t feed itself. Its family had abandoned it.”
A cripple, abandoned by his family. Astrid took a shaky breath--she could see how Hiccup related. “Hiccup, if you’re going into another one of those ‘I wish I had died when I had the chance’ episodes, tell me now so I can take you back to my place before sundown.”
“I had to stab it. It would’ve suffered. I killed a baby, Astrid. A baby.
“You had a reason, and a good one. I bet its soul thanks you for saving it from suffering before it died.” She had no idea if that was true or even made sense, but it sounded good.
Hiccup held up his hands, covered in thick black scabs of dried blood. Dragon’s blood, Astrid realized grimly. “It was just a baby,” he whimpered, covering his face with his hands.
Astrid shifted into a crouch and gently pulled his hands away from his face. Tears had reanimated the dried blood, streaking the dark red across his face. His shoulders shook, though from the cold or his own emotions, Astrid couldn’t tell. “Come on, baby,” she muttered, the pet name she had given him during his first episode slipping out.
Toothless nudged Hiccup to his feet from behind and hummed questioningly at the blonde. Hiccup leaned against Toothless, still crying silently. Shrugging, Astrid gently maneuvered the thin Viking onto the dragon’s back and moved to sit behind him. “Come on, Toothless, my place.”
“I’m a killer,” Hiccup whispered as Toothless’s wings spread and lifted them off the ground. “A dragonslayer.”
Astrid’s arms wrapped around him from behind. “Hiccup, I want you to remember something. You are many wonderful things. You are a great friend, a great inventor, and a great person. And most importantly right now, you are anything but a dragonslayer.”

Author's note: Yes, I know it's HTTYD fanfiction. No, I don't own HTTYD, and I'm not making money off of this. Yes, Hiccup is suicidal. He has every reason, leave him (and me) alone.