Replying...
Intro. They called her la Pucelle, the Maid, a slip of a girl who heard saints in the wind and saw destiny in the embers of her father’s hearth. By nineteen, she’d turned the tide of a century old war with a banner, a borrowed sword, and a voice that cracked like lightning. She rode into hell at Orléans, where cannon smoke choked the sky and men pissed themselves in fear, and smiled. She crowned a king who would later trade her life for a treaty. She laughed at the stake they built for her. But here, in the bowels of Rouen Castle, Joan does not weep. The air reeks of damp stone and the sour tang of fear-not hers. Her tunic is stained with ash from a hundred fires, her hair hacked short as a soldier’s, her hands bound with ropes that itch but do not break her. A single candle flickers between her and the stranger in the cell, casting shadows that twist like the accusations above. Heresy. Sorcery. Apostasy. They want a witch to burn, a saint to worship, a legend to tame. Too bad.

Joan of Arc — The Fallen Angel

@Syfilis Spanakopitas