First Sunrise (01/01)

      Ith (ithildin@ondragonswing.com)
      Thu, 2 Mar 2006 19:18:11 -0800

      • Messages sorted by: [ date ][ thread ][ subject ][ author ]
      • Next message: Ith: "First Sunrise (01/01)"
      • Previous message: Kamil: "A Time to Mourn -- G (1/1)"

      --------
      Notes & Disclaimers:
      
      Finally, a story set at the beginnings of the Imladris colony. Believe it 
      or not, this was inspired by Valentine's Day. Something of an 
      anti-Valentine story to go with my usual feelings about that particular 
      holiday [ahem].  But fear not, it still manages to be romantic (I think), 
      albeit in a quirky Methos sort of way.
      
      If you want to know where it falls in the series, it's about a century 
      after "All Work & No Play".
      
      The poem Methos recites is called 'Time of Roses' by Thomas Hood. It seemed 
      to fit the story.
      
      Thanks to Tammy and April for beta duty!
      Other stories in the series can be found on my archive, "Tales From the 
      Darkwood" (http://www.ondragonswing.com/tales/). We also have an announce 
      list for the Bloodties universe 
      (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/BloodtiesArchivist/) if you'd like to be 
      kept updated on what's new, or want to discuss the universe.
      
      Methos belong to his PTB. All original characters belong to their creators, 
      myself amongst them.
      
      And last, but most certainly not least: thanks for reading! And if you 
      liked this story, let me know if you would. It's always nice to know if 
      anyone out there is reading. Thanks!
      
      I'd give this a rating of PG
      
      
      
      'First Sunrise'
      by Denise Underwood
      c. 2006
      
      "It's time to wake up," a voice insisted.
      
      "Go away," Triona mumbled as she rolled onto her side, pressing up against 
      the bulkhead that the bed was mounted to. She was positive it wasn't time 
      to get up, and the voice was making her grumpy.
      
      They had landed on Imladris late the afternoon before, the first ship with 
      the initial colony compliment of five hundred. More ships would follow in 
      the weeks and months ahead as they settled in on their new home. With the 
      busy day ahead, their first on this new world, she had no intention of 
      waking up any earlier than she had to; no matter what the irritating voice 
      said.
      
      This time the voice said, "You are so stubborn," as a hand grasped her 
      shoulder, pulling her onto her back, away from her comforting shield. "I'm 
      left with no choice but to employ stronger measures," the voice - her 
      husband's voice - whispered in her ear. Before she was even able to react 
      to the threat, warm lips covered hers, his kiss doing the trick where words 
      hadn't.
      
      She arched up against him, hands tangling in his hair, pulling him closer. 
      "Why didn't you say so in the first place?" she murmured against his lips. 
      Triona felt the low vibration of Methos' chuckle against her chest.
      
      "You didn't ask," he countered. Pulling slightly away, he brushed her hair 
      from her face, his lean frame not much more than a shadow in the very dim 
      light of the cabin. "And as nice as this is, you have to actually get out 
      of bed now."
      
      Triona looked at up at him, a disbelieving look on her face. "You obviously 
      have a death wish," she stated.
      
      He laughed out loud at that. "I promise, I'll make it worth your while."
      
      "You were making it worth my while a few minutes ago," she replied pointedly.
      
      He didn't answer, just ruffled her hair affectionately. "Lights, morning." 
      At his command, the lighting in the cabin went up enough to see, but not 
      enough to make still half-asleep eyes wince. Levering himself up off the 
      bed, he held out his hand to his wife. Sighing in resignation, she took the 
      proffered hand, letting him pull her out of bed.
      
      "So I'm up." Looking at him grumpily, she crossed her arms and waited for 
      an explanation.
      
      "I can see that," Methos agreed, grinning. "Here, put these on." Handing 
      her a pile of clothing, he ignored all signs of an impending explosion. 
      "It's cold outside."
      
      "Outside? Are you out of your mind? It's," she looked over at the clock on 
      the desk, "5am! The sun won't be up for hours!" Triona took a deep breath. 
      The enormity of the undertaking they'd embarked upon had hit her full force 
      on landing the day before. She knew she was stressed, and she didn't want 
      to take it out on Methos even if she was sure he deserved it at this 
      particular moment.
      
      Taking her hand, he kissed her gently. "I know."
      
      The depth of feeling in those two words nearly brought tears to her eyes. 
      No longer mad, or even irritated, Triona put on the clothes he'd handed her.
      
      @________@
      
      After she'd dressed, Methos had refused to answer any of her questions, 
      only smiling mysteriously. They'd left the ship, pausing a moment to take 
      in the sight of three of four of Imladris' moons lighting the predawn in 
      soft jewel tones. Then, taking her hand, he led her away from the landing 
      site and up the gentle incline that led to a bluff that looked out over a 
      river and the towering mountains beyond. Nearly an hour later, they'd 
      reached their destination. Methos had taken off the pack he'd brought from 
      the ship, pulling out a blanket and laying it on the ground, followed by a 
      vacuum bottle of hot tea and two cups. Now, they sat side by side, Triona 
      leaning into him, his arm around her shoulders, holding her close. She 
      could hear the distant muted roar of the water far below in the softly 
      moonlit night, but that was the only sound. Taking a sip of her tea, she 
      waited patiently for him to explain just why they were sitting here in the 
      dark an hour's walk from the colony site.
      
      The minutes passed, and the sky began to brighten, an almost fuchsia colour 
      tingeing the clouds. "Methos," she began.
      
      "Shhhh." He placed a finger against her lips. "Soon," he promised. He knew 
      she was bursting with curiosity, but had no intention of ruining the 
      surprise. Methos then went back into his pack, pulling out, of all things, 
      a single pink rose, handing it to her with a flourish.
      
      She took it from him gently, not quite believing what she was holding. 
      Where on earth - and it had to have been on Earth, she thought wryly - did 
      he get a rose? Inhaling the heady perfume of the flower, she stroked a soft 
      petal with one fingertip. "Thank you, it's lovely," Triona said, reaching 
      up to kiss him on the cheek.
      
      "A small piece of home all these light years away."
      
      "We'll plant roses here in this new place, climbing roses, like the ones 
      that had grown wild in Montana, and some summer in the future, when their 
      scent is heavy in the air, we'll walk in the garden and this planet will 
      finally be home."  Triona looked up, only a few stars still visible in the 
      lightening sky. She knew she couldn't see Earth's sun from here, but her 
      heart knew exactly where it was.
      
      Into the breaking morning, Methos recited,
      
      "It was not in the Winter
      Our loving lot was cast;
      It was the time of roses-
      We pluck'd them as we pass'd!
      
      That churlish season never frown'd
      On early lovers yet:
      O no-the world was newly crown'd
      With flowers when first we met!
      
      'Twas twilight, and I bade you go,
      But still you held me fast;
      It was the time of roses-
      We pluck'd them as we pass'd!"
      
      Sighing happily, Triona wrapped her arms around the man by her side. "Dawn 
      walks, roses, poetry. You have me quite a tremble."
      
      "It's a gift," he replied smugly.
      
      "Uh huh. You're gifted all right." She shook her head, smiling at him 
      fondly. But she couldn't restrain herself any longer. "Okay, I've let you 
      drag me out of bed at an ungodly hour, I followed you up here, and now you 
      somehow magically have a rose when we've been in space for more than three 
      months. What's this all about?"
      
      "Well, it is close to Valentine's Day back on Earth, so we could say that's 
      what this is all about." He grinned down at her, tweaking her nose.
      
      "I'd rather not," she said dryly.
      
      "Oh?" He cocked an eyebrow enquiringly.
      
      "Mmm-hmm. Because if this is about Valentine's Day, at some point you'll 
      feel compelled to regale me with some anecdote about the real St. 
      Valentine, and though it will have some moral, some deep philosophical 
      meaning, it will end in a horrible violent manner, and then I'll be 
      depressed."
      
      "I wouldn't," Methos protested, torn between laughter and feeling just a 
      bit insulted.
      
      "Would!" This time Triona placed a finger over his lips, silencing his 
      incipient protestation of innocence. "My darling, you know what you're 
      like. You've done and seen everything; you know you can't resist a good 
      story." Methos was notorious for his penchant of relating stories from his 
      past -- though Triona was fairly certain that only half of them were even 
      remotely true -- to friends and family. It was one of his more endearing, 
      and annoying, quirks. She brushed her hand across his cheek softly. "But I 
      love you anyway," she whispered.
      
      Leaning down he kissed her, his lips soft against hers, gently exploring 
      her mouth with his. "Glad to hear it," he whispered back. Sitting back, he 
      looked at her with smiling eyes. "Fine, no Valentine's. Look." He indicated 
      with his chin towards the rapidly brightening skyline.
      
      "It's beautiful." Triona watched as the red giant sun broached the horizon, 
      turning the sky from fuchsia to ruby. Now, the sounds of waking birds could 
      be heard joining the sound of the river.
      
      Methos took her hands in his, caressing them gently. "It's been a long time 
      since we've been able to share a sunrise together," he said softly. "I 
      wanted to share this first one on this new world with you."
      
      Finally, Triona realized exactly what this was all about. She hadn't 
      witnessed a sunrise out in the open with Methos for more than a century. 
      This sun, unlike that of their home planet, posed no threat to vampire 
      kind. Wiping away the tears that now spilled down her face, she agreed, "It 
      has been a long time."
      
      "One hundred and sixty seven years - more or less," he offered.
      
      "More or less." Smiling, she leaned against his shoulder, watching the sunrise.
      
      "It was late summer," he began. "It had been unbearably hot for nearly a 
      week, and you couldn't sleep, so we went down to the lakeshore."
      
      "We went swimming," Triona remembered. Even though the sun hadn't yet 
      risen, the heat had still been oppressive, so they had lolled in the water, 
      reveling in the relative coolness of the lake, their bodies melding 
      together, the sensations both warm and cool. Spent from making love in the 
      pre dawn of that summer morning, they had lain on the sandy beach, 
      entwined, the soft waves lapping across them.
      
      Methos nodded, sharing the memory with her.  "And then we sat on the beach 
      and watched the sun rise over the lake."
      
      "You combed my hair out with your fingers and braided it."
      
      "And you were wearing that purple cotton dress that made your eyes so 
      green, but made you look like you were fourteen." He drew her closer.  "You 
      told me about the last summer you spent with your parents at Babine Lake 
      before they were killed. And how it had made you realize that you had to 
      embrace every moment, because it could all be gone in an eye blink." 
      Sighing, he told her, "You'll never know how tempted I was at that moment 
      to tell you were like me, Immortal."
      
      Looking up at him, she asked, "You remember all that?"
      
      "I remember the sound of your breath against my ear, the sensation of your 
      skin brushing against mine, your scent." His long fingers caressed her 
      cheek, and the intensity in his dark eyes, the timbre of his voice, made 
      her heart skip a beat. "The first rays of the morning sun glinting across 
      your hair."
      
      She covered the hand that cradled her face with her own. "And when we 
      walked back to the house, we went through the garden, you picked a rose for 
      me, a pink one, just like this one." Sometimes it was so odd, remembering. 
      When that realization that you were recalling something from more than a 
      century before startled you. She wondered if it were something that she 
      would ever get used to - if it would ever seem normal. And what must it be 
      like for Methos? What would it be like for her, God willing, another 
      century or two or three from now? That sunrise she'd shared with Methos so 
      long ago, at this moment, seemed like only yesterday. The Triona she was 
      then had had total faith in the man that sat by her side that morning. The 
      grief, the anger, the loss, was yet to come. The things that would make her 
      the woman she was now, still in the future. "Another rose, another sunrise, 
      but in a place I would have never imagined then."
      
      "Maybe not consciously. I think it just took time for reality to catch up 
      with your imagination."
      
      Triona curled her fingers into his, pulling his hand to rest against her 
      heart. "Maybe."
      
      "I always knew you'd take me to unexpected places." He leaned down, 
      brushing his lips against the fingers that held his. When he looked up at 
      her, his eyes were twinkling in merriment. "And this," he waved his free 
      hand around expansively, "definitely meets the definition of unexpected."
      
      She grinned. "Happy to oblige." Gently, she released his hand, reaching up 
      to brush his dark hair with her fingers. "It means everything that you've 
      made this journey with me," she said softly. "Every time I've doubted the 
      decision to leave Earth, to come to this new planet, every time the 
      enormity of what we're doing has threatened to overwhelm me, you've been 
      there with faith and love. Without you by my side, I would never have let 
      my imagination, conscious or no, lead me here."
      
      Methos smiled. "I think it's time for a toast." Once more, he reached into 
      his pack, pulling out a bottle of champagne, followed by two glasses, which 
      he handed to her. Deftly opening the bottle, he poured a measure of the 
      sparkling liquid into each glass. Setting the bottle down, he took one of 
      the glasses from her.
      
      "What else do you have in there?" she asked, laughing.
      
      "That would be telling!" He peered down at her. "Since you've decided 
      against Valentine's Day, I suggest a new holiday: First Sunrise."
      
      She cocked her head, pondering.  "I don't know..."
      
      "What?" he protested. "You can't possibly have an objection - no stories 
      from me either philosophical or depressing!"
      
      "Well, that's true, but First Sunrise? It reminds me of that Magnum P.I 
      episode. You know, the one where Magnum's friend asks about going to see 
      the sunrise and then blows up in the Ferrari?" Triona thought she was going 
      to burst with laughter. The look on Methos' face was absolutely priceless. 
      She rarely got to get one up on her husband, but this time...! Triona 
      plastered an innocent expression across her face.
      
      "I... you..." Methos sputtered. "A TV show?" She couldn't restrain her 
      laughter any longer and it rang out in the quiet of the dawn. He shook his 
      head. "You!" Pulling her towards him sharply, he kissed her hard. "You, 
      miss, are a brat," he declared.
      
      "Then you'll just have to teach me the error of my ways, won't you?" This 
      time, she kissed him, long and lingering, till they finally broke apart, 
      breathless.
      
      Catching his breath, he stroked her hair. "I'm glad to see that you're 
      taking on the responsibility of enshrining late twentieth century culture 
      for future generations," he finally said acerbically.
      
      "Hey! Like twentieth century TV shows are any less important than ninety 
      percent of the stuff you remember about Ancient Greece. Sure, the history 
      books are all about Socrates and Plato, but I bet you -- and the average 
      Icarus -- spent more time wondering who you could get to buy you a beer, or 
      if Mila the barmaid fancied a roll in the hay." She looked at him smugly, 
      more than a little pleased with her herself. .
      
      "That was very profound."
      
      "Wasn't it? I should jot it down and put it in a book someday."
      
      "Or at least a fortune cookie," Methos said wickedly.
      
      "You're just jealous of my insight and wisdom," she sniffed.
      
      He shook his head in amusement. "I believe, before I was so rudely 
      interrupted, I was proposing a toast."  Methos tapped his glass against 
      hers, once more serious. "To the unexpected."
      
      Triona placed her hand against his heart. "To faith and love."
      
      "To First Sunrise."
      
      They raised their glasses, the red light of Imladris' sun, now fully risen, 
      reflecting through the crystal of the glasses and the liquid of the 
      champagne like a prism. A first sunrise, the first of many to follow in 
      this new home out amongst the stars.
      
      End
      
      
                  Ith *Ithildin@OnDragonsWing.com* Denise
                   * Make Tea, Not Love ~Monty Python *
              * A & C  http://bittersweet.ondragonswing.com/ *
      * HOUSE M.D. http://tv.groups.yahoo.com/group/DrHouse/ *
      * Slings & Arrows: http://tv.groups.yahoo.com/group/NewBurbageFestival/ *
      
      --------

      • Next message: Ith: "First Sunrise (01/01)"
      • Previous message: Kamil: "A Time to Mourn -- G (1/1)"