A War WagedA Chapter by Joshua W. HarrisJoanna has completed her task, but she finds that Victor's scheming knows no end, and she may not leave unscathed.Digging up the casket proved to be easier than anticipated. The dirt she hauled from the farmlands seemed completely weightless, and
for every shovelful she tossed aside she could feel the strength only grow
further. As she inched closer to the man whom had summoned her, she could feel
his influence growing stronger and stronger. The man who had destroyed the
boundary of fairy tale and reality. When her shovel finally hit wood with a hollow thud, and the dirt was
all cleared from the casket, she noticed for the first time that her hand had
almost completely turned black. The darkness from the mark was grasping its way
up her arm in tendrils, following her veins. She looked down at the rotten,
mud-caked wood, and she wiped her brow with her filthy hands, heaving a sigh.
She fetched a length of rope from her old shed--the same place she had gotten
her shovel--and she tied it around the casket at the center. She heaved with all her might and found that the coffin felt like little
more than a small child as she placed it on her back and held the rope over her
shoulder with a single hand. She was about to climb out of the hole with her
other hand but she stopped herself and smirked. She squatted low to the ground
and then sprung up, leaping out of the seven foot deep hole with the casket on
her back, the smirk having grown into a full-blown smile. ‘I think you’re starting to enjoy
this, Jo.’ “I’ve never felt like I had any power before. It’s the first time that I
feel like I have control over my own life. The power to change things.” Her
voice faltered towards the end as she hefted the coffin higher on her back and
bit her lip so hard she could taste her own blood. ‘Ironic, isn’t it?’ “That’s what I was going to say…” she whispered. She began walking back towards her
smouldering home, not knowing where else she could go, but the voice halted her
in her tracks. He gave her direction to an old, abandoned church that she had
never even known was nestled into the woods behind her old home. When they arrived at the church, Joanna was surprised that the building
was still standing. The aged stones were so covered with moss that it looked like
a piece of the forest itself, and the structure leaned so heavily to the side
that it seemed to be held in place only by the plants that called it home. In a
way, it almost felt cosy--a home that a friendly witch might have lived in. Off to the side of the building was a heavy pair of cellar doors--the
lock binding them together proved ineffective against the strength of the woman
who begged entry. She placed the coffin laying down on a workshop table in the
cellar and she breathed a heavy sigh. It was done. ‘Not yet, Jo. You’re only halfway
there.’ “What do you mean?” Fear tinged her voice, but much to the vampire’s
glee, there was also hope. ‘Digging me up was only the first
stage of my request. I have yet to become whole.’ “You mean to say that you aren’t--” ‘Not by a longshot, Jo. It takes more
than a stake in the heart to kill the King of the Dead. Your kind has tried for
centuries.’ “And yet, here you are enlisting the help of a little girl.” ‘Mind your place, Joanna. Remember
who gave you the power that you’re drunk on.’ “Shut up!” ‘Oh? Does the truth hurt, my little
girl?’ “I said shut up!” Her fist struck the front of the coffin with incredible force, but in
some strange feat of durability, the wood seemed to repel the attack. A
shockwave from the impact blasted the mud and grime from the face of the
coffin, and as the last of it fell away, she could see the initials ‘V.B’
burned into the wood. Her fist seemed to ache as she pulled it back from the
punch, and she looked down at her knuckles to see the skin shredded and
bleeding. ‘I gave you that power, Joanna, and I
can most certainly take it away from you. Don’t think you’re the only one who
will help me. You’re only here because you lived the closest to my grave.
Because your family was what I saw most of in my time of slumber. Believe me,
however, Joanna,’ The shadowy essence that she had seen
before seemed to leak forth from the coffin and form a shapeless man, his hand
lashing out and grabbing her by the throat. ‘if
you continue to disrespect me, or believe yourself above me, I will show you
just how wrong you are.’ The shadow tossed her to the ground and began to retreat back within the
coffin as Joanna coughed, gasping for her breath as she looked at the box. She
had almost forgotten what it was that she was dealing with. She knew that she
had become something monstrous, but somehow in all of the chaos she had
forgotten what she was dealing with. If something could create a monster as
heinous as she was…then just how terrible was he? “Who are you?” ‘I wondered when you would ask me that.
My name is Victor Barlowe, and I was a blacksmith in my time.’ “That’s not what I meant.” ‘Ah, so it is the what that you seek.’ “Yes.” ‘I am a vampire. No…the vampire.’ “So, you truly are a demon.” ‘No, not at all. Demons are a
different sort entirely. Nasty bunch, essentially bent on the extermination of
life and the endless torturing of damned souls. You see, I am not interested in
killing off every living thing. A Vampire has to feed off of the blood of the
living. Human blood, to be precise. A curse passed down to us all from our
Mother.’ “I thought that you were the King of the Dead?” ‘Yes…but that is another story. If
you’re good maybe one day you will hear it. For now, however, I have more work
that must be done. One last thing before you are free from this contract of
ours. I need five men willing to trade their lives for gold.’ “And exactly how am I to convince them to do such a thing? It’s not like
I am clad in gold, now am I?” No. But I am.
Wearing the robes of the nuns that had once inhabited their church, and
carrying enough jewellery to purchase five souls, she had embarked on her
quest. She had to take a horse from her stables, as the population of her small
community outside of Whitehall had all been turned out by the redcoats before
they had burned down her home. She would have to travel into Whitehall if she
wanted to find what she was looking for. She slipped into the tavern after dark, never speaking, but instead
allowing her fingertips to trace along the flesh of the patrons. As she passed
her hands over them she also skimmed the contents of their minds and hearts,
searching for those who were hungry for power. It did not take long before she felt a man bump into her, staggering
back in from taking a piss. His white shirt was caked in sweat stains and it
hung off of his lean frame. His dark brown hair was tied back into a ponytail
and he sat back down at the bar with a heavy sigh, ordering another pint. Joanna slid in beside him and didn’t say anything at all at first, sitting
quietly with her hands folded onto her lap. She placed a hand on his forearm,
apologizing for bothering him in a sweet sing-song voice. He turned to her
impatiently, his eyes wild, and he was about to say something when she tightened
her grip so hard that her fingernails dug into his skin. She saw into him, like she had seen into Peterson, and she grinned from
ear to ear as she let go of his arm and his head hit the bar table with a
vicious thud. His beer spilled across the table and Joanna jumped backwards
with a shriek of surprise as she caught him before he hit the ground. A couple
of the visitors gave her a strange look as they noticed how she had caught the
much heavier man, but most of them seemed to shrug it off, not wanting to think
ill of a woman of the cloth. One man, however seemed to watch her carefully as
she picked him back up into her seat, and she could feel his eyes on her back
as she told the bartender that this man had consumed too much alcohol and she
planned to let him rest the night at her church. Bless her soul. She explained that she didn’t have the strength to carry him to her
horse by herself, so she asked if there was anyone who could help her. Of the
men who stood up to help, she chose the one who looked more interested in her
flesh than being a good person. She smirked as she nodded to him, throwing an
arm over her forehead dramatically and thanking him for his valiant efforts. He
picked the unconscious man up off of his chair and hauled him onto his back,
struggling to move him into a piggy-back position. After the deed was done and the man with the ponytail was secured on the
back of Joanna’s horse, she turned to thank the man, but he was already upon
her. His fist was crashing down toward her and it landed square on top of her
nose, snapping it violently to the side. She hit the ground and her eyes
watered as she felt the blood cascading across her lips and off her chin. The
man’s trousers were loosened and he was dragging her by the hair while she was
still stunned from the blow to her face. However, as he tossed her behind a shed on the outskirts of town and
tried to hike up her robes, his hand was stopped with brute force and it felt
like cold vice grips had closed on his wrist. Joanna looked deep into his eyes
and her pupils seemed to expand from corner to corner as her nose slid back
into place with a small crack and the skin began to repair itself. The man looked on in horror, and no matter how hard he pulled he could
not get away. “But I thought we were having fun?” Her voice was so sickeningly sweet
that the man stopped resisting and instead began to cry like a child, knowing
he had wronged a nightmare. Her fist came down on his face in the same way that he had hit her, and
the man’s nose broke so badly that it almost seemed to turn directly sideways.
Her knuckles glanced off his lower lip on the path of the punch and split it in
two. He hit the ground faster than a homesick fisherman and she hauled him up
onto the back of her horse as well, slapping the horse’s rear and sending it
running back toward home. Joanna merely smiled as she raced off in the same direction, her
footsteps carrying her faster than any horse could. The wind tore through her
hair as she peeled the nun’s headdress away and she shouted out into the sky
like an animal. This was truly what it meant to be free. She had arrived at the church fifteen minutes before her horse trundled
up to the overgrown relic they now called home. The men, bound tightly on its
back, were nodding into a semi-consciousness as the horse’s gait slowed. She
slapped their cheeks as they were brought before her by her companion, and they
rolled their eyes drowsily toward her. “Now, I need you two to listen to me closely. The two of you have been
chosen to receive great power, but in order to achieve this you must do exactly
as I say. Do you understand me?” Slow nods. “Good. I am going to untie you, and you are going to follow me into the
cellar of this church. I have something that you both need to see if you are
going to understand what is to follow.” Again, their heads bobbed lazily. She gripped the ropes in her bare
hands and pulled them apart like spaghetti noodles. The two both toppled to the
ground, and rolled in the dirt, trying to orient themselves. Like newborn
foals, they clambered to their feet and they stumbled in tow of the woman who
kidnapped them. The bald, muscled, ugly man who had tried to take advantage of
her rubbed his wrist gingerly. His eyes found the rifle that was tucked into a
holster on the horse’s side, and Joanna looked at him with a grin. “Do it,” she cooed. His hand found the handle of the gun as if he had shot them all of his
life, and it was cocked and aimed in what seemed to be a split second. The
trigger pulled with no hesitation, and there was no remorse in the man’s eyes
as the bullet ripped through the back of Joanna’s skull. She hit the ground
hard, and the man spat at her feet. “Crazy b***h,” he growled, turning on his heel and walking toward the
path they had rode up on. The man with the ponytail stood, his hands trembling, unable to move a
muscle. “W--w--what h--h--have you done?” Laughter rang out, soft and sinister in their ears. ‘You think you can kill the Queen of the
Dead?’ The bald man stopped in his tracks and whirled around, looking at the
corpse of the woman he had killed. Her fingers began to twitch, and there was
an inexplicable noise, as if someone were shifting hollow stones around, and
before he knew it the woman’s skull had repaired itself and she was sitting up facing
him, her eyes like two burning embers, and her entire right arm was coated in
darkness, the tendrils working their way up her right cheek. “This is the power that I am offering you. The power to rule over men.
To take whatever your heart desires.” Her voice was like silk ribbon and sweet
perfume. It could not be ignored or denied. “What is it you want from us?” The man with the ponytail spoke plainly,
his voice unwavering and his eyes locked to hers, unafraid. “It is not me that wants something, it is my master.” “And who is this man?” Not a man, Kadence. Victor’s voice echoed in their minds, soft, but demanding of absolute
attention. Something more. By the end of the second night, Joanna and her two newly recruited
allies were able to seek out and procure three more (more or less) willing men.
It was past midnight by the time the three of them made it back to the church
with the three others, carrying them on horseback. It had been easier to
persuade others to join them when they were approached by men that they knew;
their tales of endless life and power were lures few could deny. They followed
them into the cellar, and Victor’s coffin lay ajar, his withered, yet whole
body completely still. “This is what has given you these powers?” The first man, Henry, asked. “Yes.” The men couldn’t help but stare at the black tendrils of tainted
flesh that stretched across her cheeks. “And what does he want from us in return for this satanic power?” This
was Roland. ‘Your service. In only one thing. I
need four vampires of powerful blood--my blood--to complete a ritual and reunite
me with a very old friend.’ “I can’t help but notice there are five of us, but you just said you
needed four vampires,” the last man, James spoke, confused. ‘Quite the pickle isn’t it?’ The steel clattering against the stone floor brought all of their eyes
instantly to the kitchen knife, and they seemed to hang in the moment, looking
to each other for some sort of sign that this was real. Hanz was the first to
move, lunging for the knife, but Kadence brought his keel out in a sharp kick
to his shin, bringing him quickly to the floor. He spun and received someone’s
fist to the side of his jaw, the faces all a blur as he toppled backward. He
felt someone grabbing his ponytail, and his neck being pulled up. “Bullshit!” Hanz roared. “That son of a b***h is mine!” Kadence’s head hit the floor as Hanz slammed into the man who had been
holding him. He rolled over, trying to get his bearings, but the first thing he
saw was the bald monster above him, his hand swinging down fast. Pain exploded
throughout his body as the knife was plunged into his chest, and his eyes
bulged as he felt his breath growing short, the vision of the grinning beast in
front of him beginning to darken. “There. Now there are four.” Hanz stated plainly, standing up and
brushing his hands off as if he had just finished taking out the trash. The other three men looked at him, horrified, and he quirked a brow at
their puzzled faces. “What?” He felt a wetness in his hands as he brushed them together, and
when he looked down he could not explain the dark liquid that spewed from his
neck like a burst pipe. He stumbled sideways and caught himself on the table,
his blood coating the wood of the open casket. Kadence dropped the knife, and he fell to his knees. Blood was draining
from his chest wound quickly, and it was likely that his heart had been nicked.
His shirt was quickly changing from white to red, and as he fell forwards, a
pair of strong hands grabbed his shoulders and stopped him, laying him down
softly. “You’ve done well,” the man’s voice was coarse rocks rolling in the
ocean, his vocal chords old and unused. Kadence felt something warm and wet on his lips; the taste of metal
filled his mouth. When he realized what it was, he pulled his head away, trying
to escape the bony clutches of the corpse-man. But his struggling waned as he
felt the vitality that surged through his body. His heart began to race and he
felt more alive than he had ever felt before. He gripped the man’s arm and the
bony hand let go of him as he drank deep from the forbidden fountain of youth. After he had taken almost a pint of blood from the vampire, Victor
pulled him off of his arm and Kadence looked up at him with an astounded grin.
“This…this is…incredible.” He began to laugh, turning around on his heel, his
wounds forgotten. His laughter carried strong for a brief few moments before it
seemed to falter, a worry tainting it before it turned into coughs. Blood
spattered the floor in front of him and he grunted as he clutched his chest.
His heart was hammering so hard he couldn’t breathe and he cried out in agony
as he felt it beginning to shut down. His whole body felt like it was on fire,
and he writhed upon the ground, biting his lip to try to divert the pain until
the room went dark, and his body was still. “Jesus Christ.” Roland whispered, his thick fingers rolling through his
tangled hair. “Please, spare me that name,” Victor stated, annoyance in his voice. “R--right.” A gasp came from Kadence’s dead body as he sat bolt upright, still
clutching his chest like he had been when he died, terror in his eyes. A piercing,
high pithed shriek escaped James’ lips as the man rose from the dead, and as
the echoes of his terror fell silent the other men looked at him, bewildered. “W--what? The b--ba--b*****d was dead!” Before long the four men had all tasted Victor’s blood, and with it
experienced death and rebirth. They all tried to ignore the sounds as Victor
fed from Hanz’s body, replenishing his blood between turning the men. By the
time that he had finished, his skin had tightened, though he remained aged in
appearance. His hands were gnarled, and the talons that protruded from them
made him look the monster that he was. His teeth were like that of a shark, rows and rows of small, pointed
knives protruding from his gums, and his ears came to an almost elfish point.
Joanna had brought him down a priest’s clothing, and after he had gotten
dressed, he led them all into the main church. It was here where he used the
moonlight through a window to begin etching a chain of circles and writings of
the sorts that none of them had ever seen with his own blood. When the
immaculate ritual circle had been crafted, he called the others all together. “First things first, Joanna. I need back the strength that I lent to
you.” Victor reached for her hand, but she pulled away from him sharply,
desperation in her eyes. This resistance, however, was short lived as his
influence seemed to completely wash over her and she found herself unable to
control her own body. He reached out and grabbed her arm and he dug his nail deep into the
back of her palm, where he had placed the mark in the beginning. “My, oh my,
Jo, you did well.” She didn’t flinch beneath his control as he pulled his nail
from the back of her hand and with it a tendril of black smoke seemed to follow.
He spread his palm wide and the smoke followed his call, wrapping around his
hands and seeping into his skin. He reared his head back and exhaled a long,
pleasurable sigh. When he lowered his gaze, his skin had tightened and his
youth had been restored. His sharp, feminine features held an undeniable
allure, causing the thinness of his lips and the bend in his nose to go almost
unnoticed. His long, raven hair flowed down to his chest, and he grinned from
ear to ear. “Your time with me is almost at an end; after this you will all be free
to go. I apologize for any roughery that my requests have caused, but I do hope
you find it well worth your while.” His voice had become smoother: a gentle
wave breaking against them; harsh, but soft; beautiful, yet commanding.
“Joanna, I need you to stand in the center of this diagram. Careful not to
smudge even the tiniest bit. The other four of you, I need you to stand around
her in the positions of true North, East, South, and West. I have marked them
accordingly.” The group of them moved as he commanded, though Joanna’s steps were
timid and her eyes locked onto the air itself--her hands shaking. She was about
to stumble through the blood markings on the ground when Victor reached out and
grabbed her arm. “Careful now; you’re alright.” His eyes flashed like gold. She
blinked absentmindedly and nodded, turning around and maneuvering through the
circles and old script without touching a single bead of blood until she was standing
in the center of it all. Victor commanded the four men to each put a hand on Joanna, and when
they had, he traced a clawed finger across his wrist. He trailed his blood from
the outermost circle, and let it pool a few feet away. When enough blood had
pooled he placed his hand inside of the blood. The cut on his wrist healed, and
his eyes began to roll into the back of his head. The room seemed to hum as the
man began to speak. “Darus Van Gaellen: protector of the
saint’s sword, leader of our Mother’s guard, and betrayer to your rightful
king. Let the bond of blood we share be reinstated, and the cold of death be
removed from your forgotten soul. I give you a soul for your own to consume, a
life for a life, and a body so that you may once again walk beneath the light
of the stars.” The smoke-like essence that he had removed from Joanna coursed into the
blood pooled beneath his palm and shot along the trail to the ritual circles.
The blood seemed to glow, shimmering a bright crimson as the energy passed through
it. As the light began to emanate from the entire circle, Joanna’s body tensed
up and her eyes grew wide. “N--no…please…n--not again. N--not again,” she sobbed. “What…is this?” Henry stated, blinking as if to shake the sleep from his
eyes. James’ eyes widened as he looked at Victor. “What are you doing to us?
I--I can’t move!” A light chuckle escaped his thin lips as he looked at the four of them
from his crouched position. “Did you honestly think I would waste the gift of
life eternal on a group of nobodies like you?” “You b*****d!” Kadence growled. A purple smoke began to pour across the floorboards wherever Victor’s
blood touched, and it began to surround Joanna, swirling around her feet and
slowly raising up her legs. Paralyzed in fear--knowing what was to come--she
could not move as the purple fog took over her vision and she began to breathe
it in. The men around her dropped one by one as their bodies seemed to shrivel
up and cave in on themselves. Kadence held his ground, falling to his knees as
his hand and body seemed to wither away. As his vision began to fade, the sound
of breaking glass exploded in his ears. The knives had come through the window
first, and as Ellis rolled through the ritual circle and barreled into Joanna, knocking
her to the ground. Victor roared out in anger, pulling the knives from his
chest, but even afterward the wound burned fiercely, and Victor could smell the
garlic that had been rubbed on the edges of the weapon. Ellis stood quickly, but by the time he had blinked his eyes, Victor was
in front of him, his eyes ablaze as his clenched fist slammed into Ellis’
gut--sending the man rocketing backwards and smashing through a second window,
landing outside. Ellis coughed, his body aching from the punch, knowing that
the vampire had likely re-broken the ribs that he was working on fixing. It
didn’t help that his left arm was covered in savage burns, and the sleeve was
missing from his trench coat on that side. The blessings of the Crusaders of
the Lord were good enough to make simple recoveries quickly, but nothing was
going to repair all of that in such a short period of time. He grunted as he got to his feet and cracked his neck. Old man preacher packs a punch. Ellis
sighed as he rolled his shoulders, hearing the bones grind together as he loosened
himself up. When Victor came through the window after him, Ellis’ eyes caught
the path that the man would take, analyzing his movement as quickly as he
possibly could, and he was still only able to catch a glimpse of it. Ellis moved to the side, spinning on his heel and attempting to brush
off the attack, but as he spun his shoulder bumped into the bony chest of his
adversary. His eyes widened and he knew in that instant that he was horribly
outclassed. He did not know if the man’s hand had always been around his
throat, or if he had done it so fast that there had been no show of movement at
all. “You should be dead.” “So…that was your…handiwork…huh?” “Me and a good friend of mine, yes. I must say, your tenacity is quite
endearing. How is it you managed to escape the explosion, hunter?” “I didn’t…your buddy…made a good…meat shield…though.” Ellis chuckled,
though his face was turning red, and his head felt like a hot air balloon. As
his eyes began to roll back into his head, he felt a surge of air fill his
lungs--the grip around his neck released. His legs gave out on him and he
crumpled to the ground, unable to stand. His vision began to falter, but he met
Joanna’s crazed eyes for a moment, seeing the woman gripping Victor’s wrist
tightly. “I won’t let you do this to anyone…ever…again!” she screamed, pushing
the hand to the side that she had grabbed and then spinning in a full circle,
bringing her fist all the way around to gain momentum before planting it square
into Victor’s cheek and sending the vampire blasting into the stone walls of
the church. The structure shook as Victor slammed against it, the dust from the
old stones falling around him as Joanna took sporadic, steps, each one a battle
against herself as she neared him. “You…you monster! You made me do all of those things. You’ve cursed me
to hell!” She jumped upon him swiftly, straddling the vampire as her nails grew to
a savage point. She swung her clawed hand down upon him, her remarkable
strength and speed shocking Victor. Her claws cut through his flesh, leaving a
deep gauge across the man’s cheek. Her eyes grew wide and crazed as she saw the
blood and she lurched down toward it, but halfway through leaning down to drink
her head snapped still and she could not move. ‘You will regret drinking his blood,
woman. If you consume it, you will find his influence take hold of you once
again.’ “Shut up!” ‘You think that he is unable to move
beneath you? You think yourself stronger than him?’ “Get out of my head! I won’t let you control me! I won’t let you have my
mind!” ‘I am not an enemy. I am not here to
take control of you. It was Victor who was trying to force me into your body.
You have to believe me. You need to run. Now. You and the Hunter are both a
large part of this war, now, and you have no means to kill Barlowe. You need to
escape him before he has readjusted to this world. He is still weak.’ She bit her lip as she hovered over Barlowe. He looked up to her, his
body motionless beneath hers. He looked bored as he stared up at her, and she
narrowed her eyes, clenching her fists. She wanted to strike him dead right
there, but something told her that the voice was not bluffing. Her heart
hammered in her chest, and her shoulders heaved with the sobs that she could
not stifle. She backed slowly away from the fallen vampire, and she wiped the
tears from her face as her eyes remembered every single detail of the man she
had sold her soul to. “I am going to kill you. I don’t care what it takes. I won’t rest until
I watch the darkness fade from your eyes, demon” “My dearest Joanna. There is nothing you could ever do to stand up
against me. I will be the King of the
Dead.” The building continued its resonate shudders as a smile cracked Victor’s
features. He was about to strike out at Joanna when the first stone dislodged
itself, the massive piece of rock slamming down on Victor’s leg. He looked over
his shoulder to see the shuddering walls begin to topple forward, and he
slammed his fist against the boulder pinning his limb, sending it launching
through the trees. He saw the shadow stretch out over him, and as he looked up,
the stone wall of the church was already upon him, crashing over him and pushing
his body down into the soil. By the time he had broken through the stone wall,
Joanna and the unconscious hunter were gone. © 2015 Joshua W. Harris |
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