Highlander: Sea and Wolf: A Wilderness Stripped From the World

AO3 | DW

Fandom: Highlander
AU: Sea and Wolf
Word Count: 2183
Characters: Alysse (OC), Joe Dawson, Methos
Warnings: Suicide, Original Character Death

“He was… everything. Wild wolf of the steppe, sharp and fierce as winter winds on a northern sea. The thunder of hooves beneath me; wild, joyous laughter reveling in all we were.”


“You’ll know when it’s time to come, before I have to find you.”

The last words Kronos had spoken to her still echo in the still watches of the night, when her ship sits silent on flat and brooding seas. A cruel lash of what will never happen, as her Watcher quietly told her after making port one day. He’d slipped away to make his report, and to gather what he could about “Melvin Koren”, no doubt with the explanation that he’d like to know if he needed to make himself scarce from her ship. The heart-shattering blow was so softly delivered she almost didn’t feel it at first.

Now, she sails alone in a boat that had been carefully designed for her, and built for her as a present. Lying on her back on the polished deck to stare blind-eyed at the stars that glint in cold patterns set in a midnight sky of inky black. Trying to piece together a soul that doesn’t wish to mend, struggling to remember why she clings so fiercely to life.

A wildness has been stripped from the world, and taken with it her fire – it seems, sometimes, has even taken the fierceness from the mother on whose breast she rocks now. Grey seas that mourn with her, cradling her as gently as any mother with upset child. Encouraging tears that will not come, trying to ease the numbing emptiness that gnaws at her heart.

She doesn’t know how many days pass sitting on the edge of the deck, half-heartedly fishing for her meals. How many nights blur into one another staring at uncaring stars. Only that gradually, the numbness fades, letting emotion once more trickle in around the edges. Bright flashes of overwhelming fury that someone has stolen her lover – her first, her only, because lover implies equal, and she had no other she’d consider such. Black sorrow deep enough to drown in the tears that it drags unwilling to the surface.

Screams are swallowed by the endless ocean as easily as weeping, until she wears herself thin enough to fall once more into a numbness that has become as comforting as a blanket. As comforting as Kronos’ quickening curling and crackling around the edges of her own, overwhelming and fierce.

More time passes without her knowledge, until she wears her grief thin enough to think of more than drifting with the currents and the winds, and turning away from any land she spots in the distance. When she’s willing to take herself into a port, though it takes long hours to recall where she is, and what ports might be near enough to resupply.

The docks are silent, if not still, when she guides her little boat into a marina long hours after the sun has set. There is no one to take her port-fee, and she doesn’t leave her little boat until dawn breaks, trying to remember who she’d been in that lifetime before this and to decide if she wishes to be that person again. In the end, she digs out a different persona, one she hasn’t used yet – one who wouldn’t have to worry about customs – and pays the fees that allow her to slip onto the streets of the city.

She wanders, a pair of sandles dangling from one hand so if she must put them on, they’re with her. Randomly taking one street or another, not worried about becoming lost and turned around in the web of brick and stone, steel and glass. The solid weight of her sword hidden in a coat long since out of fashion, and the smaller, more compact form of a favored pistol are enough armor for now.

A bar attracts her attention with pink neon, and she pauses to see if it’s open at this mid-morning hour. Not yet, but soon, and she mentally marks it as a place to return later. No amount of drink will drown the grief that still pricks with needle-sharp claws, but neither will it kill her. At least, not unless some fool of an Immortal challenges her, and then, she’s not entirely sure if she would truly give a good accounting of herself or simply let herself be killed.

The sky is fading into dusky blues and purples when she finds her way back to the bar, slipping in to the quiet strains of guitar and a gravel voice. The sort of drink she craves is unlikely to be found here, the reminder of her youth not readily available, but the sharp burn of vodka is good enough. Listening to the musician’s voice weave a spell of sorrow and aching grief that echoes her own heart.

That same gravel voice takes over behind the bar after the set, the musician’s worn hands pour another shot when she puts another crisp bill on the counter. Eyes that remind her of the northern seas watch her for a long moment before he asks her if she wants to talk about it. The offer of a stranger, a mortal who will never quite comprehend the timeframe, but who thinks they might have some knowledge of the depth of grief.

Still, she studies him a moment before she shrugs. If he doesn’t understand, or thinks her crazy, it doesn’t much matter to her. “His name was Kronos,” she says quietly, almost too quietly to be heard over the background. “He was… everything. Wild wolf of the steppe, sharp and fierce as winter winds on a northern sea. The thunder of hooves beneath me; wild, joyous laughter reveling in all we were.”

She looks down at her vodka, not wanting to see the mortal’s expression, but only the memories. “I was a goddess when he found me. Wild daughter of the ocean, merciless and generous, creator and destroyer. He made himself a god in the eyes of my people, brought me to my knees and taught me so much more.” A soft laugh escapes her, the sound more ragged than it has any right to be. Edged with barbs of grief. “My god, my lover. Wind and thunder and flame.”

“And now he’s dead.” The gravel voice is quiet, and draws her attention back to the lined mortal face. Knowledge more than intuition in wary, northern-ocean eyes, though how he could know, she doesn’t understand for a long moment. Not until she darts out one rope-callused hand to grip his, turning the wrist to see the tattoo on the inside.

“You wouldn’t have known him by that name,” she whispers, not letting go, watching him with a fierce anger clawing its way up her throat, choking any effort at speaking louder.

“A friend of mine does.” He doesn’t try to pull away, meets her gaze without nearly as much fear as she expects. No doubt some weapon is hidden under the bar to give him some measure of courage. “We didn’t know you knew him by that name.” The Watchers didn’t know how long she’d known Kronos – she can read that between the lines easily as breathing.

They’re still for a long moment, Watcher and Immortal, silent amongst the chatter of mortals who do not know, nor would care to if they had any inkling of what was really going on. Before she lets go, and settles back onto the stool, before the Watcher relaxes faintly, almost imperceptably.

“Your friend.” She snorts faintly, wondering slightly at the idea that an Immortal would call a mortal friend, much less a Watcher. Hers is only crew, subordinate and protected, but never equal.

Silence once more envelopes her and the Watcher, before she looks up again. “Would this friend of yours challenge me?”

The Watcher shrugs, giving her a wary look. “Don’t think so.”

“Pity.” She drains her shot of vodka, holding it out for another – she hasn’t spent the entire bill she’d handed him earlier, not nearly. She’d welcome his friend, one who she has little doubt is Immortal, right now if he’d be so obliging as to offer her a fight. Win or lose, live or die, none of that matters, only the fight itself, the fierce clash of fire and steel where life sings through her veins.

The night passes in vodka and soft-voiced tales of sea and steppe, horse and ship. Passion, fire-bright and sharp as a winter wind. Grief that breaks that all to razor-edged shards that slice deep into a soul already steeped in blood. Cuts away at the softer parts that have grown only slowly over long centuries, withers emotions that have only just begun to blossom. An anger that burns cold with no direction, and a bone-deep ache for a wild freedom that’s been lost in more ways than one.

She returns to her boat feeling hollowed out, memories flashing across her mind like knife blades, numbness refusing to curl about her in its comforting folds. Sleep refuses to come, and she spends her night staring up at a sky with fewer stars to be seen through the haze of light from the city nearby. Dawn creeps across the sky in brilliant ribbons, and with it comes a slow encroachment of crackling presence, a storm that grumbles long on the sea before it rolls toward ill-prepared shores, vast as the horizon.

A man stands on the dock, hawk-faced and silent. Dark hair cut short, eyes muddied river water older than any ocean. Watching her for a long moment before he raises an eyebrow, and tilts his head toward the shore. “Are you coming, or do we talk with you on your boat and me here?”

Waiting for a long moment, she nods. “A moment.” To remove salt-soaked clothing in favor of something that’s at least been rinsed clear, and wrap her own coat with its hidden cargo about her. Silent as they move along the dock to shore, and into streets waking from the night’s slumber. Tracing a path to the same bar that she’d murmured stories of Kronos to a patient bartender – Watcher, who’d write them down – and ducking inside despite a door locked when they arrive.

There’s a table with the chairs around it rather than on it, tea delicately tinting the air with its aroma, rather than a more welcome bottle of vodka or other strong spirits. She settles, though, and allows a cup to be poured for her. Watching the Immortal who sits across from her as she cradles the cup in her hands, waiting for him to speak and to see from that which way he intended to direct the conversation.

And when he does, there’s a wistfulness to his voice that speaks to a grief that’s perhaps not as jagged edged as her own only because he’s known for longer that the death that tears at her would happen. Had to happen. Sharing a story of Kronos as he was before she ever met him, when he burned bright as wildfire with passion more than rage, chaos and change sweeping across the world. Wildfire instead of wolf, sun-bright summer god rather than savage northern wind.

In return, she tells him her own memories, same as she had the Watcher before. Knowing they’ll not be written down, but remembered as they should be. All the while, wreathed in the perfume of tea for all that she craves something stronger to blunt the still-sharp edges. Tea that becomes something salty and bitter when she sheds silent, unnoticed tears.

“I want to see the wildness of the world again. It grows too small and too tamed to mortal hands.” Her voice is barely a whisper, and her grip on the cup tightens. “But there is no wildness left. Only children with walls and tilled fields in their hearts.”

He’s silent a long moment, the edges of his horizon-storm quickening sparking still against her own still and silent seas. “The world changes, and he couldn’t change with it.”

“He was the wild, untrammeled and beautiful.” She met the gaze of muddy-river eyes, her own lightning-charred black and dead. “As you are the horizon-storm, and I the dying seas. Children burned the wild in quicking-fire, and Mother will take me home before she lets the land-bound have me. What will you do when the world seeks to destroy the horizon-storm too?”

“Survive.” He takes a last sip of his tea, still watching her. Muddy river, horizon-storm, ocean bedrock. Ancient wild long gone and still lurking.

She remains silent for a long moment before setting the bitter brew down, a calm washing over her like the eye of some great hurricane. “Then let the ocean feed horizon-storm, and let me rest. No child should tame the seas, and Mother won’t begrudge you.”

In the end, he refuses to simply kill her, and it takes careful work to corner him and force the choice of survival or falling to her flickering blade on him. She would laugh as steel comes whistling toward her exposed neck, tilting her head back and closing her eyes. Pain lasts but a moment, and then all is dark and quickening-fire before the end.

Never Ever – LadySilver – Highlander: The Series [Archive of Our Own]

argentum-ls:

Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Highlander: The Series
Rating: General Audiences
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Characters: Methos (Highlander), Amy Brennan-Thomas, Joe Dawson, Duncan MacLeod
Additional Tags: Drunkeness, Joe’s Bar, Gods, Drinking Games, Fandom Stocking 2016, Gift Fic
Summary:

Methos has been it all and done it all. Just ask him.

And the last of the three ficlets I finished for this year’s fandom_stocking.

Never Ever – LadySilver – Highlander: The Series [Archive of Our Own]

Highlander/Norse Mythology: Valföðr

Valföðr (1649 words) by Morgyn Leri

Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Highlander, Norse Religion & Lore
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings
Characters: Methos, Silas, Joe Dawson, Jörmungandr | Midgard Serpent, Fenrir, Hel | Hela, Vali, Nari
Additional Tags: Alternate Universe, GFY

Methos and Silas find an interesting figure when hunting one day.


Highlander Holiday Shortcuts for 2013, unrelated to other HLH stories I’ve written.

Methos as part of Norse mythology as it evolves, and telling the stories as he remembers the events later.

Highlander: He Dreams

He Dreams (954 words) by Morgyn Leri
Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Highlander, Babylon 5, Lord of the Rings – J. R. R. Tolkien, Irish Mythology, Semitic Mythology
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings
Characters: Methos, Lórien, John Sheridan, The Morrígan, Henry V of England, The Brigid, Joe Dawson, Anat (Semitic Mythology), Gollum, Frodo Baggins, Samwise Gamgee, J. R. R. Tolkien
Additional Tags: GFY
Summary:

He walks dreams and he dreams reality, and one turns into the other and back again.


Highlander Holiday Shortcut for 2012.

Methos as more than just Immortal, virtue of being the first, the oldest, or maybe just something else that appears as Immortal.

Highlander: Names Familiar and Not

Names Familiar and Not (1754 words) by Morgyn Leri

Chapters: 1/1
Fandom: Highlander
Rating: Teen And Up Audiences
Warnings: Creator Chose Not To Use Archive Warnings
Relationships: Rebecca Horne & Original Male Character
Characters: Rebecca Horne, Original Male Character, Joe Dawson, John Horne
Additional Tags: Alternate Universe, GFY

Series: Part 7 of Herald – Soldier – Priest

Crouching, he traced the lines of a name that was both familiar and not. It wasn’t the name he first knew her by, and he wished it hadn’t been the last.


Highlander Holiday Shortcut for 2011, not directly connected to other stories for HLH. It uses the same OC as last year’s story, First Steps Out of the Grave.

Haerviu and his encounters with Rebecca from the first meeting to his visiting her grave.

Highlander liveblogging

morgynleri:

morgynleri:

Continuing from yesterday, starting with the scene where Methos returns to where Kronos is staying. Also known as Methos is a little shit, and Kronos demonstrates he is sometimes really blind to some nuances of human nature. Like, don’t ask Methos to kill his friends. It’s dangerous.

Below a cut because this is getting long. It has a lot of dialogue I like.

Keep reading

… And here is where I want to drop a nice anvil on MacLeod. Although this is another bit with some favored lines. Under cut for length.

Keep reading

Nope, more anvils. Joe does make things better.

(And I know there’s a lot missing, because all this is transcribing is the dialogue, and the actions and everything do add nuance.)

“Joe, you can’t defend it.”

“I’m not defending it. I’m trying to understand it.”

“What’s there to understand? When he rode into a village, there was life. When he rode out, there wasn’t.”

“No. You weren’t there. Different times, MacLeod. Different rules, different morals. You can’t compare it.”

“I won’t compare it, and I can’t excuse it.”

“Yeah. How many men have you killed? How much blood have you shed in anger?”

“No. No. I know what I’ve done, and I live with it. But I’m telling you, this is different.”

“What the hell are you talking about?”

“I’m talking about a bunch of murdering bastards that burned and raped across two continents! They butchered innocent women and children, Joe! You live with that; you see that.”

(Oh, MacLeod, you idiot.)

“I have. Vietnam. When we took out a village, we couldn’t tell the farmers from the soldiers. You think somehow the bullets managed to miss all the children?”

“This is different.”

“How?”

“Because he loved it. Because he had pleasure in killing.”

(*sighs* At the time, yes, he probably did, at least for a while. But just because he enjoyed it then, MacLeod, you fucking twit, doesn’t mean he still does. Or that he doesn’t regret that part of his life now. People. Change. And Methos is the ultimate survivor. He changes as he needs to in order to fit into the morals of the culture in which he lives. Even if other people who are rigid in their moral beliefs don’t like that he does so.)

aniseandspearmint:

morgynleri:

deadcatwithaflamethrower:

vampireapologist:

vampireapologist:

Honestly in all of these stories these poetic white men who somehow end up immortal get so bored and miserable because they just sit in their mansion all day doing whatever it is they need to do in order to sustain their immortality and then they just throw lavish parties and organize orgies or whatever and then they’re like “why am I sad I eat three course meals and have at least one orgy daily what MORE could I POSSIBLY need??”

Like???? Damn go for a walk. Do you even KNOW your neighbors? Get a dog and take it to the park. Set up an elaborate fish tank. Go skiing like you’ve been alive for 200 years and you’ve spent 180 of it in your house looking at paintings and drinking wine with other rich assholes no wonder ur life sucks my man.

Buy a canoe.

this post was specifically targeting dorian grey.

Are you–are you SURE it was just Dorian?  Because I thought a lot about Highlander version. 2′s moping for 6 television seasons.

… There’s reasons I don’t like That Annoying Twit Duncan MacLeod. Everyone else is either forgettable or fun, but him. *quietly sits on the urge to strangle a character from a show that ended twenty years ago*

I know, right? Thank god for Methos, Amanda, and Richie (and Joe!). They saved that show from being Duncan’s 90s angst blog.

So. Much.

Other than the Horsemen episodes (OMG, people change, and sometimes people you love aren’t always nice, and this makes me So. Mad…. *thwaps Duncan with a heavy stick* People change. People get better, deal with it, you over-honorable twit.), my favorite episodes are the two without Duncan anywhere near them in the 6th season.

Two of Hearts (which is where I get my “Susan Ivanova is Immortal, and just the latest lifetime of Katherine” headcanon), and whatever the hell the other one was called which was the Joe-and-Methos show. I would have loved more of a show like that. Joe and Methos snarking at each other, having adventures, slice-of-life sort of thing.

(Maybe too, a chance to see them develop Amy, Joe’s daughter into a primary character, and center the whole thing on the Watchers, instead of the Immortals? And thus have a show with a disabled protagonist and a female protagonist, and ok, still very white, but dude, it was the 90s, and they could have used that as a point to make it even better. *sighs*)