An attempt to emulate...but here goes-part 1
Days uncounted Uëlgard wandered long; every step a struggle, every movement laboured. His hunger unsated, as there were no animals to hunt. His thirst a constant reminder of water yet to be found. Yet, what little he had, hope he had even less. The unchanging land dim and grey stretched before him to no end. Soon the last rays of the sun vanished below the western sky as the world was blanketed with the blue colors of night. At the last, Uëlgard’s valiant efforts failed him and he fell to his knees. Soon despair would overtake him. Utterly alone and without aid, he unsheathed his long knife and raised it before him. Head bowed, he placed the flat of the blade to his forehead and spoke silent words beneath clenched teeth.
Lifting the knife, he turned it about to his heart when hope finally left him. But before he could thrust the deathblow, the Heavens opened brightly above him. So bright it was filling the sky entire; he felt the power as he reeled back. Vainly he shielded his eyes with his arms to no avail. Then a voice from above spoke with clarity and with such authority he could do nothing but hearken to the words and feel humbled.
‘Yea! O man, wouldst thou end thy life now when thou art so utterly close to the end of thy journey? Thou hath but to continue hence but for three nights north as the crow flies shalt thou then be paid in full for thy trials.’
Bitterly Uëlgard spoke in response yet cowered before the light and the voice. ‘Paid? In what deed have I committed that I should be paid so? Nigh a fortnight since, have I not lost all that I knew? Betrayed we were to the bitter end. And yet I was spared the path that many were unjustly given.’
‘Of this I say, their deaths were for naught,’ said the voice. ‘For thine wouldst hath been so. In thee, there is still hope for those past and for those yet to be. Thy destiny is in this O man. Verily I say to thee then, that thy house is the hope unlooked for. For I deemed it so. Deny this, then all surety of it is lost to all. Take it openly, then surely the enemy will fall.’