Dying Pickle entry
Valerian, MaleTell me about a secret they have. (499/500w + art)
If I tell you my secret it's not a secret anymore.
I stood, the stained glass world dancing in my eyes. It depicted the past, the great war between the angels and demons. Not one face, completely blank visages riding upon clouds, wings ablaze with a crimson hue. Fighting, what war were they fighting? Only the sky knows…as he does too. The judgment, the ones who thought they were heroes against the villains on the other side, but who were the heroes and who were the villians? History only tells the story in the words of the victor rather than the innocent victims, the lovers of the war.
The marveled walls stained with a hue of red as the light shined through the glass, the faceless visages melting into a distant view. I gave a sigh, lifting the corner of my robe, my wings once a crystalline white now tainted by an inky black, spreading growing, these wings weighed me down. Step by step I walked down the hall, the marble floors echoing with the click of my heels with each step. Empty. It was so empty despite the large hang paintings and glass depictions of the war. Then there at the end I stood.
The angel in white stared down at me. Mocking. Even though it wore a mask I could tell it was mocking me, taunting me about what I once was, what the world once was. A decision, I had made my decision that fateful day. The one who the world praised, the one who the winners praised, tormented by his decision. The ones who he sought to protect lost, the innocent he sought to fight for lost, and the land he once knew, lost. So he would repent, repent not for the lost to forgive him, no, he would repent for them all.
If I tell you my secret it's not a secret anymore. But was this really a secret? The atrocities he had committed were true, framed on the walls and looked at in reverence. His life wasn't a secret, yet his feelings for them were. These feelings could not be known, or the whole world would be wrong, the war would have been wrong, the suffering would have been wrong. So maybe they did know his secret, yet choose to ignore it. After all, even worse than a secret sometimes is the truth.
The ghost of the cemetery. The once great cathedral ruined by the work of time. A child, a ghost, no one quite knew, wandered through the grave weaving to and from between their mossy complexions. He would sing to the graves, great wings of white tinted black, perhaps he was an angel or maybe a demon they heard about from the great war, but they did not disturb as they did not wish to find out. Little did they know the secret of the ghost, trapped in a past long gone, was their great savior. The winner of the war.