The sun was setting on yet another productive, if not somewhat disappointing day. It seemed as if his days in Feiyan had slowly degenerated to living with such disappointment, but he was not one to worry about such miniscule things. However, two more students had dropped out of his classes today. That made a total of five for the week, and his small training grounds just outside of the village's outskirts was slowly becoming quite large in comparison. With as many students as he still had left, he was just barely making enough money to support his family, but he knew he would continue to perservere and make up for the deficiency in coin.
The mile long trek home to his cottage was his time to unwind and ponder what he would have to do to keep supporting his wife and son. It seemed as if his walks were becoming longer and longer, as he lately became more and more thoughtful of other ways to cover the expenses of food and repairs. Tasks began to scroll through his head, from repairing the roof to prepare for coming rain to obtaining the materials he required to reforge and strengthen his slowly dulling blade. The latter he wanted to focus on the most, but he knew, along with everyone else in the quaint little village of Feiyan, that having a well-kept blade was hardly worth the effort, time, or expense. The village he wanted to protect needed no protection. Perhaps that was why his students found it a worthless venture to train in the art of swordsmanship. Personally, he liked to believe the villagers were simply lazy and uncaring of the dangers that lurked out in the world.
His eyes laid sight on his family abode as the sun just began to dip below the horizon. Set atop a hill and surrounded by trees that he had planted, it was a vision of peace that still took his breath away. Images of war and blood had all but stained his memories, and this simple household seperated from the world was his way of escaping his own personal demons. The only thing that made the simple cottage any more appealing was his loving wife and growing son, both of whom he could never imagine living without. They were the family he had always dreamed of having, and that one of his dreams could have come to fruition was a pleasant thing to have.
Reaching the front door and idly kicking the caked mud off of his boots, he pushed open the light wooden door and stepped inside. The cottage itself was only three rooms, consisting of two bedrooms and a central room for a kitchen and dining area. All of it was fairly cramped should people ever visit, but no one ever did. One of the bedrooms belonged to him and his wife, the other to their son. Although, two beds sat in the second bedroom, but the second had not been used in a very long time and was covered in dust.
At the small hearth kneeled his wife, preparing dinner as always for the family. Hearing the door open, she propped herself up and inclined her head, smiling at the man who stood in the doorway. "Good evening, honey. Dinner will be ready soon. We're having stew tonight. It should be amazing." Her smile lit up the room for him, and he kicked off his boots inside of the door, walking over to her and placing a small pouch on the already set table. "It does smell heavenly. I brought the money we've earned for the week." He motioned to the pouch, and his darling wife rose from her task, picking up the pouch in her hand and weighing it thoughtfully. The smile evaporated from her face. "This... is much less then I imagined we'd have this week. What happened, dear?"
The man, tired and worn, removed his leather vest and sword from him and placed them off to the side, sliding himself into a seat at the table. "I had some more students quit... More than I expected. But there's nothing to worry about. I hear that the local grocer is looking for part-time work. I hope he won't mind having such an old geezer as me stocking his stall every morning." He chuckled, but the joke was lost on his wife, who still had a worried look on her face. She turned away, looking at the simmering pot at the hearth. "Perhaps I should have made something that was a little thinner..." The man, distraught at his wife's words, slowly stood and walked toward her, wrapping his arms around her from behind. "It will be fine, Eline, I promise. You know I will do whatever I can to support this family."
Eline, sighing and resting back against her husband, nodded absently at his words before leaning down, retrieving the kettle from the hearth and lifting it onto the table. "Terin, it's time for dinner." Terin emerged from his room, a makeshift wooden sword still gripped in his right hand. Her husband smiled, releasing his wife and walking over to his fourteen year-old son, placing a sturdy hand on his head and ruffling his hair. "Been practicing, have we? Mind showing your old man how your practice has been going after dinner?" Terin looked up and smiled half-heartedly, shrugging his shoulders before turning and placing the sword back behind his door. "Sure, Dad. Whatever." He walked past his father to the table, taking a seat while leaving his father to sigh despondently and take a seat as well.
Eline, having by that time finished dishing out plates of stew to both of her "boys", took a seat herself, folding her hands in front of him and pressing her forehead against them. Terin did the same reluctantly, his attention set on the fourth plate that was across the table from him. A silent prayer for their meal took place, and they began to eat quietly. Terin was only picking at his food at first, taking another look at the plate before sighing. "I wonder how he is..." Eline stopped chewing the current mouthful of meat she had eaten, casting a glare at the empty seat herself. Slowly swallowing, she shook her head. "I'm sure he's fine. Baleron was always a very strong young man. I'm sure he's found a place for himself somewhere out there."
A sudden fist slammed down on the table, causing Eline's husband's bowl of stew to fly off of the table onto the floor, shattering it into many pieces. Both his wife and son looked at him surprised, and he stood from the table, his eyes downcast. "That boy is nothing but trouble. He killed a man with that power of his, and he should have been executed as a consequence." Eline stood up quickly, too, glaring at her husband. "How can you say that? He is our son, Gero!" Gero turned his gaze to Eline, shaking his head and grabbing his things from the wall. He stalked toward the door, opening it as he hooked his sword around his waist. "That boy... Baleron is no son of mine." The house shook as the door slammed, leaving Eline and Terin alone to their meal.
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