A bright twinkling light made out vaguely, it was nearly obscured completely by the swaying leaves of the trees and wisps of dark clouds that floated past the deep hole that Tilla had fallen through. Its entrance concealed by soil and overgrown flora, there was only a small gap in which she could glare up at the night sky far above her. The stars winking down at her mockingly as she laid on the course and craggy rock at the bottom of the pit, Tilla groaned as she felt a ripple of pain move through her spine. However, this pain was but a minor ache compared to the aggravated throbbing she felt in her ankle.
Conscious that her pursuers would not be far behind her, Tilla did not take more time to lament this change in her circumstances before slithering away from the opening. Considering it prudent to remove herself from the direct eyeline of anyone who might chance a peek within the small orifice that had been made in the weakened ceiling of the cave. Tilla crawled along the floor on her elbows. Her head eventually meeting with one of the cold walls, she emitted a muted hiss through clenched teeth as the fresh pain only added to her suffering. A headache now pressing at her temple, it seemed to accompany the steadily growing list of afflictions as Tilla proceeded to gradually inch herself up along the moist texture of the rock.
Managing to sit upright, Tilla clutched at the burning sensation that each breath inspired in her lungs. Her heart still racing even though her feet had ceased, she attempted to slow its frantic rhythm as the voices of the Hunters became distinguishable from her hiding place in the forest floor. The men’s footsteps crunching over the debris from the foliage cautiously in the night, Tilla clamped a hand over her mouth to cover the sound of her strained breathing as they grew ever closer to where she had fallen. Their proximity, causing her to doubt the effectiveness of her shelter, she shrunk back into the wall of the cave. Hoping that the darkness would be enough to cloak her presence, Tilla drew her knees into her chest. The sound of their dialogue penetrating the ground above her, she listened to them tensely.
“Did you see which way she went?” One man questioned. Their gait slowing significantly, Tilla assumed that they were scanning the landscape for any signs of her in the dark. However, the hole, difficult to distinguish under the cover of night, and her tracks confused by the mess of leaves she had kicked up in her clumsy descent. There was a pensive pause as another man answered, “No, she just vanished.” This response succeeded by the sound of stomping as one of the men stabbed at the ground roughly with the heel of his boot, it sent a shower of dirt and fragmented rocks cascading down on Tilla below as the first man spoke again. “There must be a concealed entrance to an escape route or hide out somewhere around here.” He said. Announcing the deducement as though it were obvious to his trained eyes, Tilla found that she was mildly perturbed by the remark.
Although unable to view the man or his features from her burrow, she imagined that he wore the same determined expression that a trained bloodhound might wear upon pursuing a bushy fox through the woods. Wondering if she too might meet the same unfortunate end as the fox if she were to be caught by them at this moment, any further images that Tilla’s mind could come up with surrounding this notion were fortunately interrupted by the man’s colleague.
“You’re probably right,” He replied, “but it could be a trap. It would be better to come back at sunup with the proper equipment.” The other man, sounding either too exhausted or disinterested to continue their chase into the night. There was a considered silence that fell between the two Hunters before one eventually released a long exhalation. Evidently yielding to his partner’s proposal, the steadfast of them responded sternly, “Alright, but that means dawn. No lying in.” Contented with his small victory on this matter, there was a hint of joviality about the other man’s tone as he answered, “You know, it's really hard being friends with a stickler like you sometimes, Adrian.”
The men’s voices and boots gradually retreating from where she was hidden, Tilla waited until they could no longer be heard before breathing a sigh of relief. The tension leaving her body all at once, she slumped back into the wall. Her lips ceasing to tremble from her uneven breaths, Tilla allowed her hand to once more fall at her side as she contemplated what had transpired more clearly now. Injured and with no full proof plan to evade the men when they came for next morning, Tilla did not need the Hunters to say it to know that she was well and truly trapped. Unsure that one more night's freedom, passed in a cold and damp cave, had been worth the effort of concealing herself from them. Tilla was forced to make amends with her choices now as the shadows of the cave enveloped her.
The stress of her narrow and somewhat tenuous escape slowly subsiding, Tilla decided to examine her ankle. Employing the brief moment of peace to administer first-aid, she removed her boot and the woolen sock that went along with it, before prodding at the wound. An angry coloration already present around the wound and some suggestions of movement still present, Tilla’s face pulled into a wince as she squeezed the swollen ankle lightly. Her jaw, made stiff by the discomfort, a grumbled spell was coerced from her lips, “Sanocolore.” The command, producing a vague reddish glow where her fingers met with the skin on her ankle, a pleasant warmth began to spread around the wound. However, it did not last long before this agreeable feeling was replaced by the uncomfortable tingle of pins and needles within. A crease forming between Tilla’s eyebrows as she endured the side effects of the spell, she came to rest listlessly against the side of the cave.
Relieved to confirm that the injury had not been a break, as it would have proved harder to heal. The fact still remained that the development did not lend itself well towards her plight. Tilla’s condition not conducive to walking, let alone any immediate plans of desertion, the wound only seemed to solidify the potential outcomes of capture or death in Tilla’s mind. The last of her energy poured into conducting a puny spell that would likely not mend her injury in time for her to avoid the return of the Hunters at the rise of day, Tilla removed the shawl from over her head. Seeming to have no choice but to anxiously await her fate, she settled into her position there within the cave. Shivering against the persistent chill that hung in the air, she drew the covering around her shoulders closely. However, it was not long before Tilla found that it was no longer the cold that provoked a shiver from her, but rather an overwhelming primal fear.
Another presence felt lurking somewhere within the darkness, Tilla glanced at her surroundings. Regarding the cave’s shrouded tunnels rapidly, she could determine nothing from the abyss which seemed to extend around her in every direction. Plagued by the feeling that she was not alone and left with little power that would enable her to protect herself, Tilla came to grips with a new eventuality that she had not yet accounted for: being maimed by a wild animal. Flinching as a chunk of debris was overturned by whatever creature was spying on her in the cave, Tilla’s eye flicked warily in the direction from which the noise had come emitted from. The object, sizable enough for its movement to reverberate in the bowels of the cave, its echo could still be heard as she locked eyes with the glistening blue irises of the creature that stalked her. A large black wolf emerging from the darkness that had cloaked his approach, he did not hesitate to converge on Tilla now.
Finding his prey to be weakened and backed into a corner, there was a sort of alluring danger in the wolf’s eyes that struck Tilla’s uneasy heart as he bore down on her. Certain that this was the rogue lycanthrope that had vexed so many of the villagers, she did not know whether he had yet to be driven beyond reason or descended into the lawlessness and brutality that was said to be the way of the other outcasts of his kind. His gaze, disturbing something within her slightly, Tilla grasped for any object that remained within her reach. Her heart rate pulsating restlessly in her neck, she took hold of a dense rock beside her. Tilla’s palm, hardly large enough to hold it easily within her hand, she raised the stone above her head in threat. Her eyes, not relenting to her fear, they did not leave the predator as she yelled, “Stay back!”
Unimpressed by her warning, the light in his glacial colored irises were fixed unswervingly on her as he continued in his approach. Clear that the tools available to her were insufficient in warding off the werewolf and with no other means with which to flee his lair, Tilla at least intended to put up a fight in her last moments, no matter how futile they might prove. Throwing the rock she held as hard as she could muster, she gasped as it landed with a stark thud on the wolf’s head. The impact opening up a gash above his left eye, his progression paused as a few drops of red dropped onto the ground in front of him. The liquid saturating some of his dark fur, the Lycan looked at the rock and his assailant with mild irritation before eliminating the last of the distance that remained between them.
The air, catching in her throat as she felt his hot breath upon her cheek, Tilla froze in her position. Sure that he could hear every faltering rhythm of her heart, the beast regarded her critically for a moment before snorting in her face. Evidently deriving some amusement from her reactions to his subtle aggressions, the wolf opened his jaws to reveal the sharp rows of fangs inside. Her eyes clamping shut in anticipation of the painful death that was to befall her as soon as he was finished toying with her, Tilla cringed as she felt the rogue wolf’s canines close at hand. However, she was surprised when the Lycan seized the fabric on the back of her garment instead.
The creature, yanking her along in the direction from which he had come with his teeth like she was some prize from his hunt, Tilla squirmed in protest. Her arms flailing in a feeble attempt to earn her release, she issued a disjointed objection, “Put me down!” The complaint, made more feeble by the sound of the moan that slipped from her lips as her ankle was jostled by a piece of rubble that had fallen from the cave. Recovering from her agony just in time to be dropped unceremoniously onto a collection of pelts, Tilla withheld any further statements as she glanced around at the vague outlines of the objects that surrounded her. Identifying a few items of clothing and evidence of charred logs from a past fire, she thought this most likely to be the center of the wolf’s lair.
Uncertain as to what his intentions were for bringing her here, Tilla twisted around. Harboring a suspicious glare within her eyes, she attempted to scramble away from him, when the wolf issued an exasperated huff. Evidently growing impatient towards her futile actions, the Lycan flopped down on top of her. Laying on his side as he pinned Tilla the furs, she attempted to shove the wild creature from her. However, his weight and obstinance proving to be immovable, she eventually conceded her defeat on the matter. Her body sinking under the sheer mass of the beast, Tilla grumbled a disgruntled final remark towards her unlikely capture before he could drift off to sleep, “You better not have fleas.”
Contemplating the fire, which crackled in the pit before her, Tilla listened for any other sound within the cave. Sitting for a while in this attitude, but distinguishing none else but the distant dripping of water, she decided that now was the time to leave. Awaiting her chance to move from his lair as soon as the wolf had departed on his hunt, Tilla did not know whether it was the correct decision to flee the shelter offered to her. However, she was aware that to not leave now would be to guarantee she would remain subject to the lycanthrope’s whims for the foreseeable future. The irksome fact of her partially towards the werewolf still evident by the aching thrum within her chest, Tilla reminded herself that it was a dangerous flirtation not worth being captured over as she took a knife from beside the fire. The weapon, used to skin the prizes of his hunts, Tilla fastened it to her thigh with a long piece of fabric she had ripped from the hem from her skirt. Glancing one last
The Hunter’s steps or the sound of his breathing as he trudged through the forest, still too far to be discerned by the natural ear. Tilla strained to listen. However, failing to detect another’s presence other than herself and the Lycan, who persisted to sit on top of her heavily, she instead looked back up at the wolf skeptically. Squirming in order to signal her discomfort in their current position, the movement provoked a crinkling of fallen leaves and other assorted remnants of forest debris, which prompted the man to press her back down more firmly into the ground. His ears, remaining keenly fixated on the sounds of the wood that were secret to her, he growled, “Hold still.” A crack of a twig heard shortly after this impatient warning was issued, Tilla’s head twitched in the direction of the noise. Convinced more now that the man had not been trying to deceive her, she no longer insisted on escaping from his grasp. Settling into her awkward situation beneath him, Tilla’s eyes
The clear waters rushing over the edge of the falls serving as a screen from the outside world, it was only the sensation of violent shiver that awoke Tilla from her slumber. Her legs curled into her chest as she attempted to ward off the dampness that permeated the grotto, she wrapped her arms around them. Pulling the cold limbs closer in a fruitless effort to maintain what remained of her warmth, the pathetic sight somehow prompted a dense pile of fabric to be unceremoniously dumped on top of her.The surprise of their mass, ridding her of the last vestiges of sleep that she had been clinging to when he had reentered into the cave. Aggravated by the rude awakening, Tilla’s eyes sprung open to glare at the beast who had thrown the articles down at her. His back facing her as he transformed into the tall muscular figure of a man once more, Luther pulled on a shirt he had taken from the ground. Not realizing why such a natural act as getting dressed seemed so strange to her at first, T
“Tilla!” Her name called out through the red mist that had corrupted her vision. It was yelled again before Luther’s voice could startle Tilla from the trace she had fallen under. Blinking, wide-eyed and bewildered as though she had just awakened from a long nap, she glanced around at the men that surrounded her. Finding her assailants now collapsed on the ground, their hands held to their throats in a desperate appeal for air. Appearing to be strangled by an invisible opponent, the wood was soon afflicted by a gruesome chorus of gargling and grunting as they remained doubled over on the dirt. Still pinned beneath the weight of the man who had pinned her to the ground, he spluttered forth a cough. The wet hacking noise followed by a spray of red liquid that splattered across her face, Tilla stayed frozen as Luther came forward to pull the man from her. The lycanthrope’s eyes, darkened by the vehemence of his anger, Tilla scrambled away from him as he subdued her attacker with a bruti
The breeze, like a warm humid sigh of a weary wanderer that hung limply in the air. There was little to inspire song from the birds nor rustle the leaves of the trees that housed them as they traipsed through the silent forest without a word spoken between them. Nothing present apart from the vague suggestion of running water in the distance to disguise the sound of a twig snapping underfoot as Tilla stumbled forward. The harsh crack the frail fallen limb issued, seeming to linger amidst the stoic conifers of the forest. Tilla’s gaze drifted naturally upwards to observe the tempestuous gray clouds that lingered just above their pointed tops. Her attention, arrested again by the land, as she felt a pull on the fabric of her skirt. Tilla let out an exasperated exhalation as she looked down to discover that yet another devious cluster of vines had entangled their pointed hooks into the cloth of her cumbersome attire. Wrenching her hem away from the determined thorns, who had taken it u
The monotonous rumble of the carriage wheels as they rolled over rocks and gravel littering the broad dirt road, droning on as she was pitched from side to side. Tilla’s eyes drifted lazily over the landscape that passed them by until an immense white wall rose into view. Her neck craning backwards as she surveyed the tall blank expanse, which stretched up towards the sky. There appeared to be only the sentries bordering the thick boundary’s top that separated Plentar’s outer wall from the hanging clouds above. Like stony gargoyles along the parameter’s rim, the guards stared down from their lofty positions to observe the caravan that approached. Remaining unmoving from their posts, they regarded the wretched cargo the platoon of Hunters had brought with them in the manner of cold impartiality that would have been expected from them as the wagon crept closer. The rudimentary transport, fitted with metal bars, which had been strengthened against any magic or abilities that any of its
The high pitched wail heard throughout the Yard. There seemed nothing between the blank earth and sky that could stop its incessant cry as those within it turned to see the woman crumpled upon her knees on the dirt. Her palms clasped against each ear tightly as though the sound of her own shriek was too much for her head to endure. Tilla paused to observe the wretched figure, who still trembled on the ground some thirty paces from where she stood.Indifferent towards the mysterious cause of the woman’s suffering, Tilla could only regard the woman who had impeded her attempt to hobble away with the injured man with partial curiosity. However, not finding herself in such a state of overwhelming fascination that would have otherwise implored her to linger longer about the potentially troublesome scene than was necessary. Tilla had again begun to wade through the crowd, which had amassed around her when the guards marched forward to seize the panic-stricken woman.The inhabitants of the Y
Matching the dismal containment cell, the little patch of sky Tilla had once compared to Luther’s vivid blue eyes took on a forlorn gray color. Its somber shade almost indistinguishable from the walls of the cell, it was counted as just another stone amongst the many others that surrounded her that day. The window placed safely out of her reach, serving as a reminder that freedom was merely a happy delusion she had previously enjoyed. Tilla could no longer derive any comfort from its subtle presence in the cell after having endured nearly two weeks of relentless interrogations at the hands of Commanding Officer Swelhelm. Interactions with the Officer, remaining predictably repetitive and painful experiences. Tilla still preferred these encounters compared to the days where she was allowed to rot in her prison. Since it was these days of solitude that she was left to confront the haunting voices that accompanied her within the cell. Unable to shake the feeling of another presence invad
The thick cloak of darkness that the night drew around them, lingering as the sun rose over the jagged peaks and tranquil pastures of the Antheon’s southern borders. Luther neither observed the first light of dawn nor felt its warmth upon his skin as he sat deep within the craggy slopes of the mountains. Their proud figures concealing the Lycan and the frustratingly beguiling creature that he had come to cherish within their secret crevices.Casting his gaze upon the single shaft of light that penetrated the gloom, which persisted to mar the bottom of the cavern. Luther monitored the sunbeam for a while, before it too abandoned them. Its soft light, retreating behind the thick cover of heavy clouds. Their ominous dark presences hung over the couple who hid from the unwanted attention for curious eyes. Lamenting the departure of the promising strand of light from the bottom of the gorge for a moment, Luther did not wait long before once again considering the heavenly entity that was sle
Entering deep into a fissure found within the craggy terrain. There was a desolate solitude, which fell over the stony facades of the mountains as darkness descended on the land. Unfaltering under the heavy gaze of their silent review, Tilla and Luther carried the smell of smoke with them in the fibers of their hair and clothes. The scent, an unwelcome reminder of the village and the witch that they had encountered there as they drifted further into the horizon of the remote landscape. The vague twinkle of stars faded away from Tilla’s view as they fled down into the hidden crevices between the mountains. The absence of the flickering orbs’s tranquil light, allowing for a more profound darkness to besiege them. The murkiness of night was to be replaced by a more terrifying bleakness within Tilla’s dreams.Awakening within the realm of a nightmarish memory, Tilla's eyes were immediately confronted by the darkness of a desolate abyss. Surrounded by the cold stones that lined the walls o
Flames rising from under the bath, their orange tendrils licked at the basin hungrily. Their flickering light seeming to entrance the girl whose ire had birthed them, Tanneth stood motionless in the tub. Only the whites of the woman’s eyes were visible now as the fire engulfed her naked body entirely. There was nothing to prevent the flames' hot limbs from ravenously consuming the wooden tub or their surroundings. The fire, leaping onto the walls next. Tilla grabbed a towel from the little stool beside the bath before it too became fodder to the flames’ relentless wrath. Wrapping the meager covering around her bare skin as she watched the fire climb higher in the hut, Tilla groped for the handle of the door in the smoldering structure. Her eyes stinging and lungs filling with smoke, Tilla coughed profusely as her fingers finally grasped upon the thick rope cord that acted as a handle to the door. Throwing the rickety barrier open behind her, Tilla stumbled out into the open. Carried
Not a shred of life remaining in the campsite besides the Lycan and the Witch. They were to depart from the tattered tents and the scattered ashes of the communal fires that had been used to warm the refugees of the oncoming war whilst they cooked their meals later that day. Their progress neither fettered nor reinvigorated by the short time they had spent in the camp. The pair’s encounters there were merely to provide them with more hours of reflection during the arduous trek to come.Traversing sinuous rivers and golden fields of wheat and barley in their effort to reduce their run-ins with civilization. Tilla and Luther were to endure all of the hardships of the wilderness and of nature’s fickle temperament in the days to follow. Encountering torrential rains and hours the pressures of scorching heat under the confinement of their coverings with little opportunities for rest found in the tenuous sleep that night granted to them. They suffered exhaustion, dehydration, and minor woun
Their decision made, Luther and Tilla trudged towards the throng of approaching looters. Discerning that the element of surprise had been lost, there was no digression about the couple’s movements in the darkened forest. Twigs and leaves crunching underfoot to announce their advance, these vague rustlings were soon drowned out by the thundering rhythm of hooves and the thud of heavy boots that charged towards the camp.The sound of the invaders’ progress punctuated by Luther’s paws as they beat out a steady canter upon the ground. The chaotic percussion resonated within Tilla. Found to be both simultaneously unsettling and exhilarating, the cacophony of noise hummed a familiar war chant deep in her chest. Feeling that this was not the first time for this curious surge of dread and anticipation to pound against her chest, Tilla was urged forward by the fever it excited within her. Exasperated that the very thing she had been trying so desperately to expunge from her mind was not to be
The sky tinged in an aggressive hue of red that reflected upon the barren plains, Tilla sighed as she watched the crimson sun sink deeper into land. The exhalation, wafting from her parched lips in clouds of warm air that drifted towards the heavens. It mingled amidst the other pale wisps of vapor overhead, whilst she remained. Trapped in a hellish landscape that had been marred by the scars of battle and strewn with the bodies of fallen men. Tilla felt a numbness towards their fate and to the bitter chill of the air that nipped at her nose as their blood soaked into the veins of dry earth at her feet. The atmosphere, thick with the overwhelming stench of death, there was no breeze to stir the corpses from their tortured slumber as Tilla stood solemnly amongst them. Her head bent in reflection of her actions, Tilla paid her quiet respects to the number of souls that laid before her. Their faces twisted into pained grimaces and stained with their own blood, she at least held her foes
The fire, spewing a flurry of golden embers as it consumed another mossy log that had been thrust into its seductive flames. There was a popping and hissing that burst forth that accompanied the conversation of the people who had been drawn to surround its heat. Their faces illuminated by the flames that sprung up from the pit, they cast grim shadows upon the wearied complexions of the strangers as they spoke.Their tales full of the tragedy and anguish, which had led them to inhabit this remote part of the woods, Tilla listened stoically from where she sat. Sequestered to the less occupied perimeter of the communal fire, where only a vague fragment of its light could reach her. Stories of the atrocities the Red Witch and her soldiers had committed, were carried towards her on an amicable breeze. Whilst some unpleasant memories of the bloodshed and wreckage they had witnessed were recounted tearfully; there were others who expressed a hot anger towards the world’s injustice and the vi
Tilla’s outburst eliciting a crumpling of dead foliage and the frantic scurrying of four pairs of tiny feet. The startled spies scrambled over one another as they fled from their hiding place. Flying in different directions from the hollow trunk of a fallen tree. They did not pause to look back, for fear that they should be caught by the fiery red headed woman they had been surveying curiously before.However, in doing so, the smallest and less agile of the bunch was left behind. Too occupied in his haste to see adequately his surroundings, the child had fallen victim to the upturned root of a large oak. Subdued by the rogue appendage, the boy tumbled spectacularly head over heels onto the ground. His hair left askew and nose covered in dirt, the child took hold of his wrist. Cradling it to his chest, he began to cry pitifully as he sat alone on the forest floor. The child’s face distorted by pain and the fresh anguish of his friends’ abandonment, it evoked a sympathy within Till
Oblivious towards their solemn mood, the birds continued to chirp happily in the treetops. Their song, carried to them by a pleasant breeze, the vibrant winged beasts hopped carelessly from the limbs of the surrounding trees. Their merriment, the sole noise that seemed to penetrate the pair’s thoughts as they progressed further from Mater Luna territory. There was no conversation between them, only unanswered questions.The world around them, completely impartial to the experiences of their tumultuous journey thus far and the agitation of the pair’s emotions, Tilla almost felt resentful towards it as they continued to walk.The thick carpet of moss and leaves upon the forest floor, giving way underfoot in a manner that made Tilla doubt even her steps. She forced herself to trudge forward in the direction that the sun and the stars dictated as she contemplated the consistent mess of upheavals that seemed to rule their lives. The uncertainty recent events had instilled in her in regard