Day One.
They told her in ones and twos, coming to the
church to pray, to seek advice, to understand.
"They're saying that it's a siege now." "How long do you think we can
last?" "Is this the will of
your God, or will he come and save us?"
Faces upturned in hope, or downcast in despair, or staring straight
ahead in shock and confusion. "How
did this happen?" they asked and Sarah had no answers, only compassion.
Day Three.
Panic began to set in for some. There were arguments in the streets over the
most trifling commodities. "We need
that jelly, who knows what we'll have to resort to soon!" "I've sold out of all my china, how am I
going to make a living now?" "No one's getting hold of my
frillweed!"
Sarah tried to mediate, tried to explain that
people needed to focus on what was important.
Mostly she was just ignored, but on one occasion and woman actually
pushed her over so that she landed in a heap in the ash. She stood up shakily, dusted herself off and
returned to her church.
Day Six.
All the hoarding, fighting and panic-eating
was taking its toll. Most people were
having to resort to the rations the Former Baron and his closest companions
were doling out daily. They were not
exactly meagre - everyone was getting exactly what they needed, but compared to
what they had become used to amidst the Colony's prosperity, they seemed slim
pickings.
And so many turned to Sarah. "You're one of them, aren't you?"
they asked, "Can't you get us some more?"
But Sarah wasn't sure she was one of them. They didn't involve her in all their planning
meetings, didn't consult her on anything of great import. She was starting to feel like a pariah and
wondered if her self-created role of pastor to the Colony had separated her
further than she had intended.
Is this the
price I have to pay? she asked
in her prayers at night. Is this the sacrifice I have to make?
Doubt whispered to her in the darkness.
Day Ten.
The Stoneskins had been testing their defences. They did it in the middle of the night, when
they were least prepared. The Mosskind
did their jobs well, and the gun emplacements kept most of the enemy at bay
until a skeleton force of Militia could be assembled to man the walls. Even so, it was a close call and dawn broke
over a shaken people.
The number of people attending her service
that evening was much larger than usual.
A trickle of new arrivals had been appearing over the past week, but
that night the number nearly doubled.
Sarah read them passages from the Epistles she didn't even understand
herself and they searched for hope amidst the cryptic language.
She didn't know what to tell them.
Day Twenty.
There was no denying it: things were getting
desperate. Rations were already
beginning to get low, the portions handed out from the now well-guarded
warehouse seemed to be getting smaller and smaller and Sarah could tell from
the faces of Siren and Ellis when they assured her that there was no more they
could give that things were even worse than they appeared.
People were losing hope. Just the night before one of the poorer
merchants had made an attempt over the wall, leaping to the ashen ground before
anyone could stop him. He managed a
couple of hundred metres before a Stoneskin arrow brought him down, his blood
turning the ash to paste.
Sarah devoted herself to understanding the
scriptures with Theophilus at her side.
His greater experience as a believer did not mean he was any more knowledgeable
about the book they held than she was, but together they were able to glean
more than either would alone. She found
the Psalms in particular to be of some assurance and, as the long nights wore
on, found that her ever-growing congregation did too. She found it so hard top preach hope to them,
however, when she wasn't sure what hope there was.
Her prayers at night grew longer and she
often fell asleep on her knees, or with a psalm open in front of her.
Day
Twenty-Five.
Her congregation really was growing. Already it seemed that half the Colony was
there every evening, listening as she worked through a passage with them, and,
as their faces lit up with an understanding that seemed so often to elude her,
she began to realise that she was getting it too.
"And so we can see," she told them,
the truth dawning on her even as she said it, "that this is not about
knowing more about God, but knowing Him as you would a friend, a relative, even
a lover. It is about relationship and it
is one in which He himself never fails, regardless of what we have done. And that, my brothers and sisters, is the
beginning of our hope - but it certainly is not the end."
She finished the service with a smile on her
face and her prayers that night were full of thanks, her own, and those she
could read on the faces of those who had listened and spoken to her afterwards.
Day Thirty.
It didn't seem to matter anymore - the
siege. It didn't matter that they were
trapped, that their resources were running low, that there seemed no physical
hope for those within the walls of the Colony - not to Sarah, at least, and
neither did it seem to get her congregation down as it once had. They were all growing into something deeper,
she realised, something better.
That didn't mean there was no suffering, no
despair. It didn't mean that every day
was easy and every night full of innocent, dreamless sleep. It didn't mean that the hunger didn't hurt,
nor the fear creep in around the edges of silent moments. All these things were as true as they had
been in the days and weeks before, indeed many of them had only become more so.
What it did mean is that Sarah was finally
beginning to understand that the hope she had been given - gifted with - was
different from the hopes of the world around her. She had a hope beyond the merely physical,
beyond the day to day and it was so much greater, and so much more certain in
the words of her Bible, that it made the misery pale in insignificance. And better yet, she knew that she was not
alone - that there was a strength in their solidarity and, more than that, a
strange beyond which filled her every day, which reminded her that all the
suffering in the world had already been felt, already been dealt with. All that was left was to endure it patiently.
The real surprise, though, was that she had
thought she had understood all this before.
Jen had explained it first, and Rupert, then Thomas in the quiet moments
they had shared together. And she had
lived it all already in her journey across Shadow with Frostfire and Dimsun,
Diana and Seargent Jansen, Doctor Barkham and her guilt.
And yet now - now! - it all seemed clearer
than it ever had before. Now something
was being forged within her through the fires of this struggle which she could
never have imagined before. Now, she
knew, she was being refined for a purpose, but it was not for her own glory -
no. It was for His.
She spoke with passion from the pulpit of her
makeshift church and she saw in the eyes of those who listened that they were
beginning to get it as well. Hallelujah!
Day
Thirty-One.
A knock at the gates of the Colony. A familiar, gravelly voice calling,
"Open up," as crossbow bolts and gatling guns are aimed towards the
speaker and burning eyes, the colour of deep, winter ice, flicker with anger
and anticipation. "Open up,"
he says again and Sarah can feel her blood chilling at the sound, "And
bring me the Former Baron and his friends."
"Frostfire," she finds herself
whispering, as if it were not her voice, as if it were not even her life. And then that voice came a third time.
"Time to parley."
So, it has been a very long time since my last post. I'm sorry. It took a long time to write, due to a mixture of illness, tiredness and business, and then, it seemed, an equally long time to get around to posting for exactly the same reasons. To make matters worse I've been finding the story a little hard-going of late as well. I am committed to seeing it through to the end, but, since I have almost no interaction with readers, I'm not sure if I'm doing anyone a favour in that other than, possibly, myself. Still, tomorrow is another day and, hopefully, it will see a burst of inspiration that helps to push the story forward and gives me a good reason to write it. I aim to be posting again next weekend, so, hopefully, see you then!
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