Through the eyes of the prisoner...
Posted: Mon Nov 01, 2004 7:30 pm
An untitled, very short story, inspired by a comment I read some time ago in one of the forums. Enjoy or not.
So this was the insipid human cockroach his Enemy has sent to deal the final, crushing blow. A creature so wretched it was shunned by its own kind, so vile that its own body sought to be rid of it. This man, Thomas Covenant, was a monster almost as appalling as the hateful mythos is Enemy’s hounds had propagated about he himself, the one they derisively named “Lord Foul the Despiser”. The warped irony of this titular denunciation shocked but did not surprise – it fitted his Enemy’s perverse sense of humour, and his self-delusions of righteousness. The humans referred to his Enemy as “the Creator”, little realising what it was they credited him with creating. He created them, true enough, as he created this place; but the humans, in their doe-eyed worship, never stopped to wonder why their creator would put them in here with their “Despiser”. But their ignorance was not his concern; always, he had more pressing matters. Too much time had already passed – who could guess how much havoc the Enemy had wrought in the numerous centuries since the creation of the Prison? Lord Foul had once underestimated his foe’s ingenuity, and it may yet cost all the universe its safety. And now, the vile monster petulantly threw this Covenant into the Prison, supposedly to strike the killing blow. The mere stench of the man’s evil clogged Lord Foul’s throat with a film of revulsion. Incensed, Foul prepared to strike a pre-emptive blow against this latest agent of his Enemy; as he roared his defiant rage – “Groveller!” – he fed the flames of his conviction with recollections of all he had suffered, and all that must have been suffered because of him.
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The first emotion was fear, when he realised his Enemy plotted anew; but at once he realised he must prevent this latest plan from reaching completion. After gleaning as much useful information as he could from a distance, he ventured closer, to watch his Enemy at work, and perhaps discover some means to undo his efforts. Closer he stole, expecting his Enemy to detect his proximity at any moment; but by the grace of his foe’s intent labour, Lord Foul was able to gain such nearness that he could peer over the fiend’s very shoulder, into the focus of his efforts…
This time, the first and only emotion was panic. As Foul scrutinized his Enemy’s “secret project” he abruptly comprehended its purpose. He recoiled, but events were already in motion - his closeness to the Prison his enemy had designed for him was enough to propel it into life. The sensation of being pulled down, and pushed in, and compacted to the point of babbling mania, of being changed and distorted to fit into the constricted nature of this thing… He was blinded, and crippled, and finally bound into this unnatural, hellish construction that beat on his strained mind with it’s surreality in a manner that he would have recognised as reminiscent of nightmare, if immortals ever dreamed.
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A procession of centuries had passed since that personal cataclysm; events beyond remembering had transpired. Empires has risen and fallen, fleeting to the constrained near-blindness of Lord Foul’s ageless eyes. Ah yes, perhaps the cruellest of his Enemy’s torments – the mortal creatures. Living things, created within this abominable cell, and so not stunted or reduced like the target of their animosity. The imprisonment would have been an adequate hell, but the “Creator” would never be content with one torture, when others could be added with ease. An entire race of beings whose sole purpose was to assault Foul at every opportunity, and thwart any attempt to escape. They were his keepers and his tormentors, but their capabilities were only limited; for all the apparent completeness of His Enemy’s victory, the Prison had not been finished at its activation. The guards of the cell were under-equipped and ill-informed. So now it came to this. Growing ever closer to escape, Lord Foul now found himself confronted with a creature more soulless and contemptible than any of his gaolers, but with the power his Enemy had sought so long – the power to end him. Ironically, Foul’s prison was now his cocoon, for his Enemy could not strike directly with this wild power, without first unlocking the cell. Instead, he was forced to send this disease-ridden ghoul to do the deed.
Frail and ineffectual though the creature clearly was, he bore a power that could slay the only guardian remaining to the universe. Now Lord Foul must somehow blindly bring his truncated power to bear in defence, for the first time, of his very life.
So this was the insipid human cockroach his Enemy has sent to deal the final, crushing blow. A creature so wretched it was shunned by its own kind, so vile that its own body sought to be rid of it. This man, Thomas Covenant, was a monster almost as appalling as the hateful mythos is Enemy’s hounds had propagated about he himself, the one they derisively named “Lord Foul the Despiser”. The warped irony of this titular denunciation shocked but did not surprise – it fitted his Enemy’s perverse sense of humour, and his self-delusions of righteousness. The humans referred to his Enemy as “the Creator”, little realising what it was they credited him with creating. He created them, true enough, as he created this place; but the humans, in their doe-eyed worship, never stopped to wonder why their creator would put them in here with their “Despiser”. But their ignorance was not his concern; always, he had more pressing matters. Too much time had already passed – who could guess how much havoc the Enemy had wrought in the numerous centuries since the creation of the Prison? Lord Foul had once underestimated his foe’s ingenuity, and it may yet cost all the universe its safety. And now, the vile monster petulantly threw this Covenant into the Prison, supposedly to strike the killing blow. The mere stench of the man’s evil clogged Lord Foul’s throat with a film of revulsion. Incensed, Foul prepared to strike a pre-emptive blow against this latest agent of his Enemy; as he roared his defiant rage – “Groveller!” – he fed the flames of his conviction with recollections of all he had suffered, and all that must have been suffered because of him.
--------------------------------------------------
The first emotion was fear, when he realised his Enemy plotted anew; but at once he realised he must prevent this latest plan from reaching completion. After gleaning as much useful information as he could from a distance, he ventured closer, to watch his Enemy at work, and perhaps discover some means to undo his efforts. Closer he stole, expecting his Enemy to detect his proximity at any moment; but by the grace of his foe’s intent labour, Lord Foul was able to gain such nearness that he could peer over the fiend’s very shoulder, into the focus of his efforts…
This time, the first and only emotion was panic. As Foul scrutinized his Enemy’s “secret project” he abruptly comprehended its purpose. He recoiled, but events were already in motion - his closeness to the Prison his enemy had designed for him was enough to propel it into life. The sensation of being pulled down, and pushed in, and compacted to the point of babbling mania, of being changed and distorted to fit into the constricted nature of this thing… He was blinded, and crippled, and finally bound into this unnatural, hellish construction that beat on his strained mind with it’s surreality in a manner that he would have recognised as reminiscent of nightmare, if immortals ever dreamed.
--------------------------------------------------
A procession of centuries had passed since that personal cataclysm; events beyond remembering had transpired. Empires has risen and fallen, fleeting to the constrained near-blindness of Lord Foul’s ageless eyes. Ah yes, perhaps the cruellest of his Enemy’s torments – the mortal creatures. Living things, created within this abominable cell, and so not stunted or reduced like the target of their animosity. The imprisonment would have been an adequate hell, but the “Creator” would never be content with one torture, when others could be added with ease. An entire race of beings whose sole purpose was to assault Foul at every opportunity, and thwart any attempt to escape. They were his keepers and his tormentors, but their capabilities were only limited; for all the apparent completeness of His Enemy’s victory, the Prison had not been finished at its activation. The guards of the cell were under-equipped and ill-informed. So now it came to this. Growing ever closer to escape, Lord Foul now found himself confronted with a creature more soulless and contemptible than any of his gaolers, but with the power his Enemy had sought so long – the power to end him. Ironically, Foul’s prison was now his cocoon, for his Enemy could not strike directly with this wild power, without first unlocking the cell. Instead, he was forced to send this disease-ridden ghoul to do the deed.
Frail and ineffectual though the creature clearly was, he bore a power that could slay the only guardian remaining to the universe. Now Lord Foul must somehow blindly bring his truncated power to bear in defence, for the first time, of his very life.