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    COTY

    Assailant -- Year 226

    QOTY

    "But the dream, the echo, slips from him as quickly as he had found it and as consciousness comes to him (a slap and not the gentle waves of oceanic tides), it dissolves entirely. His muscles relax as the cold claims him again, as the numbness sets in, and when his grey eyes open, there’s nothing but the faint after burn of a dream often trod and never remembered." --Brigade, written by Laura


    trick or treat, lovelies; round two
    #11


    They escape through the convenient portal  just in time to dodge a knife in the back.

    Kult lands in a crouch against lush blades of uniform grass. His right hand falls in a fist against the earth, balancing his weight before he can topple forward from the momentum. The rise and fall of his chest brings oxygen in long pulls to his lungs, a welcome strain from their run. He can barely help the crooked grin that seems to plaster itself against his (now human) jaw in triumph. They had escaped the madman Jack, no thanks to Peter of course. The young man was about as useless as tits on a turtle, and just as ugly.

    Long strands of greasy, brown hair fall away from his eyes as he looks to see just where they have ended up now. Peter is still with him, trembling terribly and fussing with his soiled clothing. His shirt is askew, the boy seems to have trouble tucking it back in just right. Kult had shoved the sorry sap through the door in hopes to be rid of him. Fall to his death, be sucked into a black hole- no such luck.

    His own attire is a bit worse for wear, but nothing that would cause him a second thought. Appearance did not matter all that much to Kult. Usually, the only reason he kept half way decent, was because of Kirin. It made him cross, and Kult had no desire to upset his brother-or any of his siblings really. His trousers are torn on one leg, just at the knee. Likely the material had ripped against the cobbled street when he and Jack had it out with their fists. His coat is crusted with blood along the left side of his collar, along with twists of his lackluster hair. His ear (the left one) hangs limply against the side of his head, the smallest bit of flesh keeping the flopping appendage in place. No matter, the fold of skin was unimportant, even if he lost some clarity to sound in that side.

    He brings himself to standing position in one fluid movement, watching Peter fidget and taking in their new surroundings. A voice speaks, amplified as if from some megaphone. Megaphone. He grimaced each time a strange word wound its way into his thoughts, and again when he understood its meaning. The woman’s voice tells him about her maze, the surprises within(but not what they are), and how he will be transformed (but not what he will be transformed into) . Another game. Well, that is just  fine with him, he thinks; lacing his fingers together to crack his knuckles. The maze he can see, or parts of it at least. Huge, towering  hedges of close growing shrubs rise before them. The evening sun settles in the sky, soon they would be faced with navigating in the dark. He grabs Peter by the sleeve, dragging him forward to what he thinks is the entrance. “Come.” He says simply to the shell shocked boy, surprised with how easily his captive submits.

    His new friend advances with a heartless pace, mechanically moving his limbs. Kult is not the only one who wishes that Peter was any other place. He decides he will keep the boy alive, for now, he may end up coming in handy for whatever awaits them in this emerald garden. The first thing he notices are the watchful pixies, tiny things, none of them taller than a ruler. Their pointed ears and eyes give them an alien appearance, but their features are soft-childlike even, in all their strangeness. They pace the tops of the hedgerows, looking down at the them with their odd, tapered eyes while carrying empty lanterns. As benign as they seem at first glance, one catches Peter staring and gives him a wide smile. Their mouths are full of pointed teeth-the better to eat you with my dears. Kult looks on through dark, narrowed eyes before smacking Peter upside his head with his palm. He would need to keep a careful eye on his companion. Hell, he would need to take care to keep an eye on their route as well.

    He pats at his jacket, Peter giving him a questioning sideways glance. “Trail” he grunts, continuing to check his pockets. Peter arches an eyebrow, “Trail? Whot you mean trail?” he questions. Finally finding something useful, Kult pulls a handkerchief from his inside coat pocket, smashing the material into Peter’s nose. “Trail.”  Again a single word explanation before he tears the material, tying a sliver of cloth on the nearest bush. “O-o-oh. A trail. Right, I’ve got just the fing in me pocket.” He displays his own blue square of cloth, which Kult deftly snatches from his possession, his solid glare waiting for the idiot to protest. His companion instead gulps loudly, shoving his hands in his pockets before speaking, “Right, whot’s mine is yours” His eyes find the ground, a good place for them.

    For a while they walk in silence, Kult marking the way when he finds necessity, mood on edge. They have yet to encounter one of the woman’s ’surprises’, and it does not sit well. Not well at all, especially when travelling with a most undesirable partner. They round the next right corner, a giggle from one of many fiendish pixies, and find an unexpected obstacle. The path is forward only, there is no way to turn left, nor can they accomplish much by backtracking. Ahead are panes of windows? No, mirrors. Mirrors . His mind provides the word and he is reminded of the first one he encountered, back inside the mansion. The one he had left in a million shattered pieces against the wooden floor. Here there are many panes of the reflective material, all of them seem to be woven together, framed in white trim. Walking forward to what he believes to be the entrance, Kult collides with a clear pane of thin plexiglass, his own nose flattening comically against it. He could not differentiate between the clear material and the illusion, that it too was reflective, from the mirror behind it.

    He frowns, the corners of his mouth pulling downward, forehead creasing in concentration. He reaches a knuckle forward, rapping on the material, testing each slender rectangle until he finds a void in the pattern. “Here.” Announcing that this space is open, before grabbing Peter and progressing into the puzzle. How ridiculous, a maze within a maze.

    For some time they both tap at sheets of plastic, reflective panes of mirror, sometimes finding a path forward. Other times, blank spaces simply lead into a small corridor, forcing them to turn around and try again. At others, there is some form of trap awaiting their incorrect choices. Peter finds several such places. The fifth time, Kult grabs the boy’s right hand, crushing the fingers until he cries for him to stop-buckling at the knee from the pressure. He had just had to save Peter’s ass from falling into a pit at the end of a false hall. Before that, they had pushed on a rotating mirror that triggered an explosion. Kult was still sore about his singed eyebrows.   “Try harder” he growls, a menacing stare to match the hostility in his commands. His companion whimpers, rubbing his purple ring finger gingerly; it is very much broken now.

    Turning on his heels Kult leads their small party back the way they came, stopping as a thick fog steadily creeps over the grasses. Clouds roll in, thick puffs of grey and black, blotting out the evening sun. They threaten rain and bring a chill to the air, so much for using the stars to navigate later. From overhead tiny pinpricks of haunting blue light emerge, along with the chatter of tiny voices. So that was why the little bastards held lanterns, he squinted ahead, their task becoming much more difficult. On top of being inside a mirror maze, the glow of lantern light is most mesmerizing, several times he must redirect Peter from wandering off. The little fuckers were trying to lead them astray, whispering into the half light for them to follow.  Taking the shreds of handkerchief from his pocket he hands a few strips to Peter, and shoves what he can into his own ears. Nothing seems to stay in his left, so he gives up on that side, stowing the bloody material back in his coat.

    It’s slow progress forward, the work is tedious, tap here, no. Tap there, no, not it. Tap, tap, tap. Kult is too wrapped up in leading them out of this god forsaken fun house, to notice that Peter is no longer behind him. After a particularly difficult series of mirrors, he finally finds an opening, grunting a deep ” come on” to the boy. It’s only then that he turns to find no one there, strips of blue cloth are held aloft in twisting spirals by a hovering, green pixie. A malicious smile on its face as it waves the cloth at Kult, indicating that they have managed to deter his friend. He makes to grab the little shit, missing and catching a handful of air-sending the creature into a fit of throaty laughter. He is going to need to be much quicker, tapping furiously against glass after glass, keeping an eye out for any particularly bright glow of blue. He spots it, just barely against the dense fog, but it is there no doubt.

    A cluster of a haunting lantern light hovers over a particularly stupid, brown-haired boy. Closing in he takes note of what exactly his assistant is being led to. One rather wide pane shimmers, even with no light cast against it. A rainbow of swirls and white mist, against what appears to be an otherwise empty frame. “Can you hear it Kult? The voices, they’re so wonderful. They know the way out.” He speaks with a hollow tone, a sleepy, unconscious voice.

    Kult reaches him just as he presses his right hand into the cloudy mists, his flesh burning and falling away as if dipped in acid. Luckily Kult pulls him back, with angry yells from several pixies following the rescue. Peter’s screams are atrocious. Bits of flesh are burned away, sliding to the grass in chunks, causing the boy to continuously cry. Kult tears the bottom of the boys shirt, ripping the material and quickly wrapping the mangled claw. From then on, he leads the boy by the elbow, and eventually they emerge back into the garden maze.

    The fog lifts then, dispersing until the night is free of its veil, though the clouds still block out the sky.  A consensual silence falls over them, Pete has finally learned to shut up, and Kult could not have been more grateful. He could have been less hungry though. His stomach was churning, making him feel nauseous from the emptiness.  His companions stomach was just as vocal, grinding with long growls that even the pixies could hear.

    Perhaps such noises are what conjures into being the next unfriendly scenario. Everything about the scene is off. Kult very quickly decides that this courtesy is not to be accepted, especially not from their host. Especially, after the types of traps they have so far witnessed, nothing good was going to come from this trick.

    From several flickering candelabras, light shines on a long wooden table. On top of  the table spreads a feast of great proportions, all manner of delicacies are presented in over the top ways.

    A fountain of chocolate stands proudly, nestled against crystal platters of fruit, thick wedges of spongy pastries, and fine cheeses pierced by skewers. The tiers are made of solid gold that glints expensively with candle light. There are gemstone bowls filled with heaping piles of mashed potatoes, succulent buttered lobsters, strands of sausages, piles of greens sauteed in onions, bacon and healthy spoonfuls of butter.

    Boats of gravy hold ladles as big as a fist, even still dishes of meat are swimming in the same rich sauce. Crystal cups of caviar, cakes, cookies, even ice cream. A roasted boar is the main dish, a giant, ruby-red apple stuffed in it’s jaw. Fluffy mounds of stuffing line it’s platter atop decorative leaves of cabbage. Kult can taste the smells, his mouth waters at the thought of just one bite. He doesn’t, however, miss the single seated guest- a creature that looks to be made of skin. Pale as death, with folds hanging from its thick neck, and against its flat, fleshy chest. Too much skin for a too thin body, that’s what it reminded him of. Like a small creature had crawled inside the flesh of a much bigger one, attempting to be something it was not. Before the monster, sits a single dish, with two eyes-though the threat has no sockets in which to place them. None which he could see.

    Peter lingers over the table, mouth watering as he savors the smell, deeply inhaling the fragrant aroma such a feast can provide. Kult snatches the boy by his hair, yanking him away against his pleading howls. “Do not eat” he demands, his own stomach betraying him with hunger sounds. He himself would love to devour platefuls of the foreign sustenance, but he knew he could not. Not if he wanted to continue to play this game. He throws his captive forward by the head, Peter stumbles against the ground before he can stand upright. A dejected look crosses his boyish face as he gathers himself, a task proving difficult with only one good hand. Even the pixies steer clear from this aisle, their lights hovering at the far end, the direction they must go. The table sprawls the length of the path, a good 200 feet of delicious food to taunt them. All of which,  Kult has never heard of before now, but he just knows somehow that each one is amazingly decadent.

    He marches Peter forward, making sure his companion stays in front of him as they progress. The fool can’t help but to stare longingly at the steaming treats, walking slack-jaw across the manicured lawn. An utter fools appearance takes over the boy, the way he bobs his head around to look at the food he can not eat. His pace slows as his eyes wander, Kult muttering obscenities under his breath before he reaches to direct the lad once more. Peter points to the ground, “Shoes untied”, and indeed it is.

    Kult bends to tend to his laces, looping the strings with care, it proves more difficult than he thought. Trying again, he finds the loop, just in time for Peter to sprint to the table- a fistful of whipped cream to his mouth. Within moments of consuming the whipped topping, the creature stirs, lifting clawed hands to it’s head. There, in the center of it’s ghastly palms, blink the eyes that earlier lay in a plate. They swivel side to side, both arms rising to meet the head where they rest. The creature is fantastically graceful; leaping on to the table top, closing the path to a petrified Peter. Kult sprints for his partner, the idiotic child he has spared so many times now, knocking the blibbering fool out of the way. The scream that follows is dear Peter landing on his injured hand, the ungrateful little twerp. He really needs to suck it up, a hand is nothing, he still has his pathetic life. The monster advances on Kult now, slamming a fist into his shoulder. The jolt from the blow makes his arm go numb, he stumbles back clutching it. As much as he can he tries to work the limb, rolling his shoulder and arm to send blood flow through and give life back to it. It works, but it comes with the pins and needles feeling he (for some reason) associates with his foot falling asleep.

    “Fight back!” Kult yells, desperately trying to keep the monster off himself. For such an awkwardly made being, it was strong, and it was agile. On top of these already sufficient aspects, the ends of its splayed fingers are razor-like claws. They have no issue finding the soft meat of Kult’s forearm right through the coat. It’s a clean cut that makes him wince, but he will not satisfy the savage with his screams. Instead he bites the inside of his cheek to keep from crying out, a tried and true method. Peter finally starts to use his brain, dumping a golden platter of food, and raising it high over the beast’s head with his uninjured arm.

    Kult can almost not believe that the idiot manages to make contact with the head, knocking the critter out. He shoves with a grunt, straining to toss the limp skin-man off. They are both heavily breathing, Peter from fright, Kult from barely escaping a fate of becoming the next main dish. Finding his feet, the long haired young man walks to the table, shoving his fist into the meat of the boar. He tears at the skin and muscle until he reaches the inside, snapping the bones for a makeshift shank. This shank he uses to plunge into the breast of the skin walker, the creature gasps and grabs at Kult’s throat in vain. Thick black blood flows from its body as it goes limp for good, the wound sends dark veins of infection or poison along the caracass.

    He rises in rage, pulling his weapon from the skin-creature with his good arm. He presses the sharp bone against Peter’s neck, a threat and a promise to the words he speaks. “Get your shit together, or I will end you boy.” Peter makes no protest, utterly taken aback by the use of a sentence. There is simply no arguing with that.

    Kult lowers the bone dagger, wiping the coagulating goo against his trousers. The clean end of his shirt gets ripped to form a bandage, just like he had done for Peter. He shakes his head when he finishes, still dripping with sweat, his vision momentarily becomes fuzzy. Peter leans in to ask after his health, but he waves him away, muttering a “fine.” He gathers himself, wiping his forehead with the back of his coat sleeve, and stalking forward. Peter lingers a while before he grabs a few loaves of bread, jogging to meet up with his goaler.  Kult accepts the food in silence, taking the larger lump of cooked dough, despite being offered the smallest.

    The rich starch feels heavy on his stomach, making him bend at the waist and grab his knees. He dry heaves several times, spitting stomach fluid at the lawn. Peter again asks after his health, “You sure you all right then? Sumfing ain’t seem right wit you.” Kult takes his sickness in silence, aside from the retching noises. Above them the sky begins to clear, the dark clouds float away as stars dot the navy expanse. Finally the blanket exposes the moon, sitting full and proud against the night sky. The moonlight touches Kults skin, causing him to jerk in response, and his whole body begins to shake. Peter stutters, slowly backing away, “I-I-I think you had a b-b-bad bit of rye.” He stumbles, falling with a thud against the earth, unable to catch himself with one good arm. The noise brings an immediate head lift from Kult, his once black eyes, now an illuminated shade of yellow.

    He groans several times. Growls with unearthly, beastial noises. His body twists until his back his arched - thrusting his chest towards the sky. He moans loudly, a guttural growl bubbling up his throat and after, a piercing howl breaches the quiet. Hands find his face, he tears at his flesh, ripping his hanging ear from his head and throwing it to the ground. Bright blood flows from his self inflicted wound, splattering the grass in a happy holidays sort of way. This is followed by the tearing of chunks of flesh from his body. His hands and fingers curl into sharp, hairy claws, his build elongates and forms thick muscles. Each loss of human skin is replaced with shaggy, brown fur with grey peppered throughout. Soon his face stretches too, forming a broad snout, widening and on his forehead forms a striking white letter ‘X’. His back curves again, his spine jutting out from his hairy torso, each vertebra easily pinpointed. He turns to face Peter with a snarl, letting all the anger for the boy overtake him.  No longer is Kult a horse turned man. Now he is a man turned werewolf- dark fur covering him entirely. His eyes reflect the moonlight, neon tape against his dark pelt. His jaw, full of sharp fangs, drips with hot saliva-his jaw has grown along with his teeth. He is much bigger now than he was as a human, easily 9 ft tall. He walks on all fours, his limbs long and toned, but he too can rise to stand on two legs. A small homage to the man he once was.

    Peter soon finds this out for himself, failing terribly at a backwards, crab-walk scramble. Kult lifts himself to his back legs, swiping forward with a clawed hand, narrowly missing Peter’s face. Somehow the boy manages to gain his feet, sprinting down the pathway, turning whenever he can and with no sense of direction. Kult turns his head, lifting his injured arm and licking the wound. Something told him he should do that and as the cut fuses back together, he is glad it did. The Kult-wolf follows, snarling with laughter as he pursues his prey.

    He was done keeping the boy alive, the wolf demands his blood, and Kult is happy to oblige. He’s much faster now, barrelling along the path with an unsettling swiftness. He swipes at the fleeing boys heels, falling short several times before he tears the target. Peter collapses with a scream, tumbling forward in a summersault, spinning out of control against the damp grass. He clutches the back of his foot, the wound bleeding profusely.  Kult circles, snapping at the cowering child, taking delight in each flinch, each screaming sob. “Please, you dun haveta do this. Please, spare me, have mercy.” Yellow were-eyes squint, corners creasing with amusement. ”No.” Kult growls in response, leaping on top of his captive, sinking his new fangs into the flesh of his side. Peter makes feeble attempts to escape, grabbing at the earth, trying desperately to dig his fingertips into the ground.

    The screams come from a raw throat, but not for long. Kult crunches into the neck, ripping the throat with his large jaws. Peter’s screams cease, turning  into a blood filled gurgle. Blood bubbles at his parted lips, choking any chance at breathing or survival. The were-Kult  throws the boy around, whipping his own head back and forth to toss the body like a rag doll. Once dead, Kult finds the man-smell simply irresistible, sinking his teeth into the tender flesh. Each piece rips so easily, like a carving knife in a Thanksgiving turkey. When he is satisfied, he circles to the side of the remaining carcass to heist his leg. Something inside told him he needed to mark this as his kill, to make sure no others would touch it. This was his territory.

    Once that is finished he serenades the moon with his call, throwing his head back in song before darting off through the twisting paths of the hedges. After all, wasn’t it customary to thank the moon for the kill? His senses feel heightened ten fold, especially his sense of smell which he uses to trace his way along the twisting paths. Everything is driven by the beast, all he can think is, I’ve got to eat, I’ve got to hunt. It’s this that overtakes him as he inhales a peculiar scent, something that screams prey to his brain. What he finds first is the cause of the overlapping smell, one of rubbish and mold. Kult looks around at a makeshift camp, odds and ends of trash are gathered together to form slums of various materials. Milling about the dirt covered shanty are creatures-as wide as they are tall. Their skin is green, like jars of pickled olives, with coarse hair running up their bulging stomachs. Each one sports overlong arms that curve, ape-like against the ground into clawed fingers. A flat face holds two small watery eyes, a smashed snout with huge nostrils, and their bald heads host two oversized bat ears. Dretch.

    They smell him upon his entry, wide snouts sniffing into the air. There are all of 6 creatures that meander about their run down camp, every one of them charges him. There is no doubt in his mind that these ape-like demons are stupid, they dogpile him (literally) and slash furiously with their sharp claws. They do not take special care to aim, their efforts focus on subduing him until they can claw their way to victory. A poor battle strategy, even if they are fat little fuckers. It’s tooth and nail for a while, each time he manages to toss one from his back, another lunges upwards to take its place. Only when Kult manages to grab hold of one of the slippery snots, does the tide turn. With a crunch, he sinks his teeth into the green monster- red globs of blood spill from its insides. The gang freezes, the animal noises cease, and their scratches end. In their sudden adversity they flee, scattering around the compound. Five run scared, until six lay beheaded across their dump. The first creatures head he shoves onto a metal pipe, before driving it into the ground. This will serve as his claim flag.

    He deserts the dretch camp and tracks his way to a clearing filled with silver light, tongue lolling out the side of his fanged jaw. He was so very thirsty, especially after all that blood. In the center is a wide but shallow stone basin, filled with clear liquid. It looks like the freshest water he has ever seen, it smells like melted snow from the coldest mountain top. Greedily he laps the liquid, not bothering to stop until he reaches the dry bottom. Again he finds himself shaking, falling to his side in what could be mistaken for a seizure. His were-form ripples, a million disturbances on a windless lake, until he is again releasing the contents of his stomach. Everything that rises from his belly is either chunks of flesh, or red liquid. Only once his insides are empty, does he find the basin full, reflecting his human form to his disappointed, flat black eyes.


    Khaos x Killgore
    #12

    I was looking for a breath of life
    another taste of divine rush

    It seems their terror is neverending; they huddle together with the beast’s stolen words echoing in their ears until a flash of light rips the darkness apart and sends their world reeling once more. Whatever it is (and at this point, they are liable to believe anything) renders them unconscious for a bit. Mary is the first to recover, sitting up slowly to the revelation that their is grass beneath her, not wooden floorboard. It is cool and damp - if there were a breeze she might be shivering. Shay still lays motionless (perhaps assimilating that ticking time bomb makes her a tad slower) a few feet from her, so Mary crawls over and shakes her roughly by the shoulder, whispering frantically, “Shay, wake up.” No response. “Wake up, Shay! Oh, please - “ Shay’s face scrunches up in a rather cranky manner as she groans, “Wotttt?” before a weak attempt to push her away.

    After a moment, Shay also sits up and looks around at the dimly lit area. There’s a pounding in her head and her chest feels… tight, somehow. As if it’s straining against something rather restricting. As if she’d bound her breasts too tight. She massages her right temple lightly, trying to put things together. Aaaand… nope, she’s got nothing. “Did ye faint too?” she asks Mary, and when her companion nods, she shrugs. Whatever it was, it seems to have hit the both of them equally (ha, if only Mary could be so lucky). So now it’s time to figure out how to proceed from this point on.

    Mary stands and offers a hand to Shay, who takes it, pulls herself up, and brushes herself off. With a deep breath, she examine their surroundings. First, the light - it seems like they are outside, in a garden, and yet there is some sort of… hanging lantern? Orbs the size of a child’s head float a good ten feet above her, creating a general dim light with some bright spots ever five feet or so. In those pockets of light, she can see that the walls are actually very high, dense bushes. The grassy path (hallway? corridor?) stretches before and behind them, ending in intersections at either end, with the choice to go either left or right. She reaches out to touch the walls, wondering if she can perhaps push through them, but as she starts to force her left hand into the tightly wound branches, something grabs at it, sucking her whole hand into the greenery. “Ahhhhhh!! Fuck! Mary?!” she screams, trying to yank her hand away, but it won’t budge. And then there’s a searing pain in her fingertips and she screams even louder. It’s slow and agonizing and feels exactly as if her fingernails are being pulled out (they are, her intuition is spot-on sometimes). She falls to her knees and Mary timidly approaches her, more afraid that whatever is in there will reach out to grab her too, than for Shay’s safety.

    Selfish, selfish, selfish. Everyone’s so selfish.

    In reality, it isn’t long before Shay's hand is released. When she pulls it gingerly out of the green wall, blood is oozing and dripping steadily from where her fingertips used to be. All five of them are gone, and oozing wounds probably aren’t going to be very helpful in the immediate future. Mary groans and looks away - she's always been squeamish at the sight of blood. The lesson is learned: don’t touch the hedges, don't try to go through the hedges, just play the game. Shay cradles her left hand in her right and stares down at the throbbing fingers, glassy-eyed in pain, but also fascinated with the reminder of her horse-nature. Blood. Not bunny blood. Human blood. Is it…? Does it…? She wants so very badly to just lift the smallest one to her mouth and -

    The sound of shattering glass to her right breaks Shay from her reverie, and Mary gasps, cursing under breath. There is a sudden roar and heat, and then Mary is once again tugging at her shoulder, clearly ready to run without her partner. “Come on, Shay, we gotta move!” Without looking back at the flames roaring to life behind her, Shay nods and blindly follow Mary (for once), never even questioning her when she turns right instead of left. But while they head deeper into the maze, Shay continues to let Mary take the lead, giving herself the opportunity to, one-by-one, stick her fingers in her mouth and suck up her own life force. Yummmm… oh god, she could almost purr.

    Shay doesn’t really keep track of where Mary is leading them - left, right, dead end, turn around - left again; she has no idea how to navigate the maze, and clearly Mary doesn’t either. They are moving at a brisk walk, and seem to avoid further traps for a good ten minutes or so. The orbs continue to light their way. Shay’s nail-less fingers eventually start to clot, and the throbbing pain moves into the background. However, the quiet and lack of other obvious dangers make them complacent, and they both step on a hidden metal plate (one right after the other) that causes the ground beneath them to open up and a distinctly metallic/robotic sounding voice to echo out. “Exterminate the human! Dalek Supreme will not be held captive! Exterminate! EXTERMINATE!” A whirring sound undercuts its senseless chatter, and before they realize, a metal… thing… is standing before them. The rubber end of the top metal stick keeps waving back and forth while the whisk below it and the second rubber end move left to right. Now Shay may be a little ‘off’ and Mary may be a little daft, but they both know that something that yells ‘Exterminate the humans’ is bad news.

    Luckily for them, this Dalek is either dying or a dysfunctional, because neither it’s laser or sense of direction is working very well. It fires a stream of white-blue light off to Shay’s left, hitting the hedge walls and burning a hole through several of them.There’s really no way to get around the metal monster, which is now yelling “STAND STILL HUMANS! EXTERMINATE! EXTERMINATE!” Which is both silly and terrifying, because they aren’t going to stand still - although it does occur to Shay that with its sense of direction being so off, they could try to avoid its lasers and still end up being hit. But that’s a risk they’ll have to take. “Zig zag! Back towards the last turn.” And so the two of them take off, ducking and weaving and zig zagging, hoping that the randomly fired blasts from the demented Dalek aren’t going to burn a hole in them either. Everything is forgotten until they’ve gone around several more corners and the metal monster’s ranting is just a noise in the distance. It’s a good thing they didn’t run into a fully functional one that could fly - they probably wouldn’t be here right now.

    Shay and Mary pause to catch their breath, hands on knees for a good minute or so. Unfortunately, at that moment the wind suddenly picks up, raising goosebumps on their arms and whipping loose hair around their faces. Thunder cracks and they jump in surprise, look at each other and then to the sky - the only thing that could make this terrible experience worse would be a watery deluge. Shay grabs Mary’s hand and takes the lead this time, saying simply, “Let’s try to find a… roof or somethin’ ‘afore the storm hits.” Not the best logic (they’ve yet to see anything that could give them shelter or a place to hide), but she’s starting to feel desperate to get out of there. The only way to do that is to keep moving. Eventually they would have to stumble upon the exit… As the two women get moving again, the wind continues to increase in speed and strength, and the odd half light from the orbs seems grows dimmer, relegated to now just periodic bobbing pools of light. They can’t really see where they’re going, and the next turn they take dead ends to circular area filled with a waterless fountain and lots of angel statues.

    Thunder peals over their heads again, so much louder than before. It sounds like it’s right on top of them - and of course, it is; the sky bottoms out and a downpour hits them with sheets of rain so thick they can hardly see five feet in front of them, let alone any of the orbs. The water falls so hard that it stings their skin and Mary darts towards the fountain, huddling up against the edge to shield at least one side of her. Shay is right on her heels, realizing that there isn’t any other better place to hide. She’s about to hunker down next to Mary when a lightning flash lights up the area and she notices that the angel statues have moved closer… haven’t they? Another flash and - OH GOD - they are NOT in the same poses as before. She screams and steps back, looking frantically left and right - but all the faces are the same! They have fangs and outstretched hands and look as if they want to feast upon the girls’ flesh.”No... 'ow…? Everywhere…” All the statues seem to be converging on the fountain, and if Shay hadn’t seen them in the lightning flash, the girls never would have known what hit them.

    Screw waiting for Mary, Shay is out of there. At this point, there’s no need for explanation: if one of them is running, there’s probably a very good reason that both of them should be running. Shay scrambles back up, covered in mud and soaking wet, and Mary lunges from her crouch by the fountain. Mary, however, is still wearing a Victorian era dress, and it is is constricting at the easiest of times and excessively difficult to move in when water-logged at the worst of times. She is substantially slower than Shay, and while they aren’t looking, one of the angels catches her skirt. Mary whirls around, stopping the angels in their tracks, and Shay (feeling slightly guilty) comes back to help tear her free. “I dunno wot they are, but you keep lookin’ at ‘em and I’ll pull ya free.” So she huffs and puffs and slips and slides, but it isn’t long before there is a ripping sound, and Mary and Shay tumble backwards. Eh, what’s a little more mud? Luckily, the rain seems to be dissipating and the thunder and lightning no longer send their heads pounding with their booms, or blind them with the light.

    When Shay looks back up, she notices that not a single statue has moved towards them again so she whispers in Mary’s ear, “Lets walk backwards slowly and maybe we can get far away enough to run, yeah?” Mary nods and the two girls link arms and take their time walking backwards, step-by-step, until they are able to round the corner and sprint away into the maze again, taking a left and then a right and periodically looking over their shoulders.  By then, the rain has stopped and the wind has finally swept the clouds. When the last dark gray wisp is blown away, a beautiful full moon is revealed; what a shame that neither Shay nor Mary will be able to marvel at its radiance for long. Shay stares, transfixed, and first her pupils expand, then the muscles in her body seem to bulge of their own free will. Her teeth suddenly become razor sharp, her jaw elongating to a be more lupine than human. A gutteral snarl erupts from her shifting mouth, reflecting the pain of a drastically changing body and the gnawing, vicious hunger that seems to have taken her body hostage. Shay shoots up a foot or two, shredding her clothes but gaining a thick, auburn pelt and a pair of tufted ears. Talons shoot out from her fingers and toes and all wolf-Shay can think of is HUNGRY and HUNT HUNT HUNT.

    Of course, Mary doesn’t stay still when she sees Shay starting to transform before her eyes. Another beast! It’s taken over the one person she thought she could count on in this terrifying nightmare. The thought of losing the only other human in a world full of monsters is enough to send her into hysterics, fleeing blindly down the hedge row.

    Shay howls the declaration of the hunt and takes off after her, catching up in no time. Mary never stood a chance. She swipes her claws across her prey’s back, sending ribbons of red splashing onto the grass, while Mary wails in pain and babbles, falling down. She babbles and begs for a couple of seconds before Shay pounces and closes her jaws around Mary’s head, twisting savagely and reveling in the taste of metallic, tangy blood coating her throat. Bones snap and vertebrae are ripped apart, and Mary is very, very dead. Shay has no remorse.

    Wolf-Shay devours the flesh, stripping it from her bones and then cracking them open to suck the marrow from inside. When the ground is soaked with Mary’s blood and her skeleton in scattered in an arc around her, Shay is struck with a terrible thirst. It constricts her throat and dries out her mouth with such intensity that again, there is only one thought on her mind. DRINK DRINK DRINK. Luckily, her senses are keener than ever and she is able to follow her nose towards towards sweet, sweet relief. She is able find her way to center of the maze with only a few wrong turns. Once there, she spies a marble bird bath in the center. It is filled with a clear liquid, and without thinking, thrusts her muzzle into the basin and guzzles it down - swallowing and swallowing until almost every last drop is gone.

    Ahhh yes… much better. Shay sighs and burps in satisfaction - a very human thing to do. And all of a sudden, she notices that she is rather cold... probably because she's only wearing tattered remnants of her clothes again. Her thirst must have been so all-encompassing that she didn't notice when she lost her lupine features. She looks down at her left hand, that is once again fingernail-less. How... odd. Her tongue traces her teeth and finds them to be normal again, and it's probably her imagination that thinks the canines are abnormally pointy. But she does not cry and she does not wail; people die every day in London, in far slower and more painful ways. It is a fact of life. There will be no remorse here. Better Mary than Shay - and besides, she thinks, Mary was a self-serving bitch.  


    Shaytan

    so many lives
    so many pairs of eyes

    #13

    She was fury, she was wrath, she was vengeance

    There was an ache in her chest. There was an aching emptiness that caused her to physically touch her breast, forced her fingers to probe for the hole that must be there. It was not, and that realization made the pain worse somehow. The knowledge that it was her heart that ached, and not her body, overwhelmed her. She could not be here if Fennick was not. And yet her eyes stayed dry. Inside she was screaming, but outside she was hard, a glittering piece of stone. A stone forged of revenge and pain, and loss.

    Eona starred back at the door behind her, the door she had just flung herself through. It was closed. She jiggled the handle. It was locked. There would be no going back.

    Disappointment hit her like a physical blow. She hadn’t realized, until that very moment, that she had intended to throw herself back through the door. She wanted to face the horde. She was going to slice and tear and ruin until she could no longer lift her arm. Then she would use her teeth. She would kick and thrash and bite until, finally, it all went black. She wanted to go down swinging, her dead father at her feet and her dog at her side. But no, her death would not be swift and brutal. Her life wouldn’t end in snarling teeth and unbridled rage, rage so raw it felt like delight. She wanted murder so primal urge that it ripped from her chest in a savage roar. She wanted to slit throats and spill blood. But no, none of that was intended for her.

    At least, not yet.

    Not a single tear fell, but Eona ground her teeth until they ached. When her jaw slackened, unable to maintain the force of her bite, she screamed. It was the roar she had been waiting for. It was a roar that burned up her pain. It was inhumane and feral, it reverberated in her bones. The small part of her soul, the part that was still gentle and kind, the little part of her that was nothing but a young girl, went skittering away. That part feared the rage she felt, and went to hide in the dark, forgotten places of her her soul.

    Bertha answered Eona’s roar as she would answer the pack’s call. The dog trust her head back and howled. Their voices mingled together, and seemed to bounce off the moon, shattering the quiet dark and splintering the midnight sky.

    When they quieted it was because their throats were raw. Eona ran a hand down her neck, and let the world go eerily quiet around her.

    She allowed herself a full two minutes of silent pain, two minutes of pity and remorse. For a full 120 seconds Eona didn’t look around, didn’t make a sound. She and Bertha simply stood, and mourned their beloved dead. When those two minutes were up, Eona willed her heart to start beating. She forced herself to take a breath. Like an old forgotten clock finally wound, she began to tick again.

    The fatherless girl wiped her blades on her pants. She shoved the knife through her belt, and looked around. There were tall hedges, so tall they seemed to scrape the sky, and narrow passages that turned left and right. Eona bit back a moan. She and Bertha were in a maze. They were totally indefensible. They would be walking blindly into a trap, into god only knew what. Eona looked up to the inky black sky. She didn’t stop to wonder where the noonday sun had done. It didn’t seem odd that less than two hours before the sun, high in its apex, had heated her arms. All Eona felt was brief, singing, soaring gratitude for the moon, for the round glowing orb that lit the dark.

    Wetness spilled down Eona’s chin and onto her neck. Startled, she wiped at it. What she had originally thought was a tear was drool. She looked at the wet gob a second longer and tried to ignore the shudder that swept through her.

    They needed to get out of here.

    With her feet moving, Eona’s pain seemed to lessen. Her grief made her foggy, but her body seemed to sing. Each of Bertha’s steps seemed heavy, each snapping twig seemed loud, like bone breaking. But, she heard all of it, and reacted with a speed that seemed to outpace her lagging mind.

    When they reached the first corner Eona had to force herself to slow, she had to force herself to peer around the hedge wall in search of enemies. She didn’t want to look, she wanted to charge in. She wanted to feel the ring of battle, she wanted to rip and tear and chew.

    Eona shook her head to clear it. She looked down, only to see Bertha looking up at her with intent yellow eyes. The dog seemed oddly focused, and when she caught Eona’s eye the dog’s lip twitched, ever so slightly.

    Eona slammed to a stop, and the rage that boiled up through her gut thought have surprised her if she could only clear her head. Bertha’s own lips peeled back to show her teeth and the girl felt her nose wrinkle.

    “It that a threat, Bertha?” The dog responded with a low rumbling growl, and Eona’s jaw parted, her eyes narrowed, and suddenly she snapped out of it. The girl clapped her hands to the side of her head. What was wrong with her? Her fingers tangled in her hair and she began to tug, like she would pull the curly dark mass right from her head. 

    A wet tongue brought her back. Bertha licked her knee through a tear in her jeans. The dog pushed her head against Eona’s legs, as if she was telling her to keep going. Eona obeyed, and tried to ignore the hammering in her chest. They rounded two more corners, and Eona felt the fogginess grow, even as her senses sharpened, her thoughts dulled. Her limbs too, felt unwieldily and strange. Eona groaned, but already she felt numb to fear, numb to anything but rage and hunger. A little voice in her head said that something was wrong. Eona groaned again.

    Had an undead bitten her? Had she somehow not noticed?

    No, she would have noticed. She looked down at her hands. Her skin was bright, almost flushed. Her brow scrunched. Her father had gone pale and clammy. Eona felt hot like she was running a fever. With a strength she didn’t recognize, Eona ripped her tank top from her chest. She didn’t need it. She needed the moon on her skin, she needed the grass beneath her feet. Eona groaned, and this time it was in pleasure, this time it was in ecstasy and release.

    This time Bertha nipped at her.

    Eona jumped and snarled down at the dog. Bertha’s eyes were very bright, and in them, a fever that matched Eona’s own. Something about the dog’s eyes caused Eona to smile, though it was tinged with panic.

    “Bertha,” Eona whined, like a young, whimpering puppy.

    “What big eyes you have.” Eona became lost in Bertha’s eyes. She was drifting in a sea of gold. A calming sea that clung to her, that surround her. Once again she was in her mother’s womb, safe and secure. The next sound Eona made was a soft snuffling, a sound of a puppy curling up in its bed, of a young dog cuddled beneath the head of an old one.

    Then the smell hit her like a bus.

    It was sweet, and tangy. It was metallic and thrumming, a high-pitched, soaring note on her nose. Eona sniffed the air. She felt the smell make its way from her nose to the back of her throat. It tasted delicious. She staggered forward, one, two, three steps around the corner.

    The smell was a baby, a little human boy.

    The boy could stand, unsteady on his fat, wobbly little legs. He wore overalls, and little boat shoes. The part of Eona’s mind that was still human paused. Where was his boat? The girl laughed, delighted and happy, and ran to him, her arms out stretched. Bertha snapped at her pant leg, but the material ripped, and Eona pulled away.

    When Eona reached him, her laughter was shrill, keening and delighted. She scooped him up in her arms and swung him around. The boy, startled at first, began to laugh, and Eona’s laughter rose higher, becoming a near shriek. She loved this little boy. She wanted him. He was hers.

    She squeezed him tighter in her arms, and the boy began to cry. Eona froze. She looked at him again and gripped him tightly.


    “Stop crying.”
    She tried to say. It came out in a garbled growl.

    “STOP CRYING!” She tried to scream, but it came out as a garbled roar. That’s when Bertha bit her leg, hard. Eona roared again as the dog’s fangs sunk deep into her calf. The girl dropped to her knees, sending the boy tumbling from her arms. Eona had one, brief, shinning moment of clarity before the change ripped through her.

    She screamed, this time in pain and fear. The boy, dazed, toddled into the shrubs and cowered. Eona lost track of him, her thoughts focusing on her popping limbs and the searing pain that swept through her. But the pain, it was brief. Brutal and unimaginable, but brief. What followed the wave of blistering agony was relief. The pain from Bertha’s bite was gone, and in its place was a singing strength Eona had never dreamed of.

    Eona stood shakily on four legs. She shook herself and snarled. Again, her eyes fixed on the boy, and the girl turned wolf felt big gobs of drool fall from her lips and plop onto the grass. She neared the boy, dropping low on her haunches, preparing for the bite that would snap the boy’s neck.

    Again, Bertha interceded. This time, however, it was no love bite on her leg. The dog launched herself at the much bigger wolf, grabbing onto the ruff of Eona’s neck, and shaking hard. Eona roared and bucked, trying to dislodge her dog. They went down together, a tumbling ball of fur and flashing teeth.

    Eona was much bigger than Bertha, but Bertha was a fighter, and a trained fighter. She wasn’t intimated, and the cool calculated look in her eyes only spurred Eona to rage. The wolf’s teeth snapped viciously towards the dog’s neck, but before the killing blow could be made, Bertha was up and running, tearing down the corridor of hedge maze.

    Eona roared and chased after her, quickly becoming used to the power in her legs and the savagery in her bite. As a human, Eona had kept track of each turn. in the maze She’d crept slowly around the corners, checking for enemies as she did. Now, wolf and dog did none of that. They ran at breakneck speed, leaves singing and snapping free of branches as they breezed by.

    The ungainliness of Eona’s new body had given Bertha an upper hand. That advantage was quickly disappearing. As they rounded a final corner, and a meadow yawned before them, Eona could taste the dog’s blood. She could already feel it running down her throat. But, as Eona burst into the clearing, expecting to strike the killing blow, Bertha was gone. Eona slammed to a stop, teeth bared. But, Bertha had been waiting for her. The dog was crouched up against the side of the hedge wall, just out of sight. Bertha leapt, and her jaws clamped down hard on Eona’s throat. Eona yowled in pain as blood soaked her fur.

    Panic overwhelmed Eona, and she staggered as Bertha dragged her towards the center of the clearing. Eona kicked an fought, but when she did Bertha bit deeper, and soon Eona was whimpering.

    They stopped by a perfectly round, clear pool. Then, and only then, did Bertha let go. She jumped back from Eona, her belly nearly to the ground, tail tucked between her legs. The dog raised her lips in submission, and Eona staggered. Blood loss and confusion made her dizzy and mean. Eona snapped, snarled and lunged, but her movement slow and sluggish. Bertha had time to skitter into the pool before Eona was on her.

    The pair splashed into the water, and as Eona’s head sunk beneath the surface, she grabbed at the dog with her fangs. In one vicious bite, Eona tore out her friend’s throat. Water rushed into Eona’s mouth, nose and lungs, but she didn’t care. The blood that mingled in it was sweet, and tasted of victory.

    When Eona came around, her head was on the grassy bank, her body still in the pool. Next to her was Bertha’s destroyed corpse. Their combined blood had turned the pool red, and grass slick. Finally, Eona began to cry, the big hiccuping sobs of a girl who should of stay with her mother.  


    E O N A





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