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The Unmade Man | ||||||||||||||||||||||
| Chapter Ten: The Burdens Borne | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Chapter 10 The Burdens Borne Whether it was the blood soaking into the floor or the evil glow of Wraethe’s eyes as she raged against Pile’s and Toaaho’s attempts to restrain her, Nurom Misuer’s red hue seemed to burn throughout in the warehouse. Boruin stepped over the fallen child, infected with the rage that still hung like a thick fog across the room. Boruin fell upon the heap covering Wraethe, digging down until his hands clutched the woman’s face. He squeezed until her eyes met his own. “You will still!” he commanded. She snarled back at him, but she stopped writhing. “Get her up!” Boruin added. Pile and Toaaho stepped back as Griant took her in his two fists and hoisted her up to face Boruin, her feet dangling just above the floor. “I share some of the blame for this. I dared bring you out of the jungle even though I know your cycles, but you let your discipline slip in trade for blood!” “And it is beautiful!” she growled. Boruin slapped her across the face, smearing the dead blood splashed on her cheek. “‘The rites must be served or you must take my life. I will not live as a killer, soulless and feral.’ Those were your words. Do you recall?” Boruin asked. “You cannot fathom what I recall; every thrust, every filet of flesh carved by my sword, every scream and choking cry. They sing to me–yours, too.” Boruin struck her again, and Wraethe smiled through the wide split of her lip. Boruin backed away to a sword’s distance. “You led me to the jungle on our first cycle of Takata Shin,” he reminded. “You said it would lead you to rage that would be spent best in the wilds. Now I’ve seen Takata Shin’s lust in you, and Nurom Misuer’s rage. I will keep my promise if you do not keep your own” He placed the tip of his weapon on her throat. “The boy, Boruin,” Toaaho whispered. “Yes, even the innocent are not spared in your thirst,” Boruin spat at Wraethe. “It is inhuman.” “No, Boruin. Look at the boy,” Toaaho said again. The child was on his feet, the ragged tear of his shirt bloodless. His eyes were on Wraethe, his face hard. Boruin’s anger drained as if he were blasted with cold. The boy was never without some smile or content expression, but now there was no emotion in the strange child’s face. Pile stepped back, crossing hexes toward the boy. His voice shook. “Yuin, he’s dead and doesn’t know it.” The boy came forward and tugged at Wraethe’s dress. She squirmed as Griant lowered her to the floor, her eyes like a penned habback’s before the butcher’s blade. Her head tilted back, and she screamed at the boy’s blank face. “NO!! DON’T LET HIM TOUCH—” The boy placed both hands against her breast. Wraethe’s eyes withdrew as if the sun had appeared out of the black night. She slumped to the floor, and the life left her body as she slept. Boruin pulled the boy back, felt his small form. There was no puncture through his lung, no rip in his skin where the steel had exited through his spine and into Boruin’s thigh. He suddenly felt the pain of his own wound and the wet blood running down into his boot. Boruin sat down hard, drained of everything. It seemed too dark in the warehouse, and Boruin realized the red moon had finally passed over the horizon. “You did not tell them she was Ainghid Fas?” Griant asked. “No.” “A what?” Pile asked. “A demon,” Toaaho answered. “Murderous wraiths. They drink the world’s evil, make it their own.” “A demon today, yes, but her rites have kept her well,” said Griant. “The high-born Fae do not turn so easily.” “Fae?” All three men said together. “Certainly. A one as strong as this could be no less than a Moir, a queen of the Dreamlands,” Griant said. Boruin scoffed. “How can she be? Look at her face, her fingers; she looks nothing like them.” Griant’s shoulders shrugged like two hills rolling. “All the more strange, but it matters not how she looks. She is a Moir, nothing less.” “Rutting Fae! I hate those bastards,” Pile muttered. “And this thing!” he said, pointing a hex at the boy. “What is he?” “Something else,” Griant replied as he hoisted Wraethe over his shoulder. The rilk turned and left the warehouse, the boy behind. The others helped Boruin to his feet, then they followed. *****
The rilk betrayed no judgment with his words. “I will inform my warren,” he answered. *****
The sky was now more white than blue, waves of watery heat swimming on the horizon. The light grew hotter. The animals baked away, the flowers melted into the earth, and Wraethe was on fire. The sun seemed near enough to touch. She screamed as the light pierced down into her darkest points and her whole being burned. She screamed but did not move. There was nowhere to go in all the flame. *****
*****
End of chapter.
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