ForsakenA Story by SEBrunsonDuring the height of the black death, a woman succumbs to her infection and meets a mysterious girl.“The fever is consuming her. Father, her body is burning.” “I know, my son. We have done all we can for her.” “Will she ever wake again?” “It's up to God, now.” Alone in my cold, dank room, sweat beaded on my skin as I
lay inert upon a stone floor. Only a meager woolen blanket was draped over me
to ward off the chill of that forgotten place, a small, crowded square room
fifteen feet to a side. My condition required quarantine, the swollen, purpling
lumps at my neck and groin having sealed my fate days ago. And what made the
room cramped? Corpses. Stacks of them.
Bodies had been piled in the corners at least ten deep, awaiting burial.
Dark puddles of leakage dried on the floor beneath the stacks while those
bodies at the top were uncovered. Their grotesque discolored faces pulled tight
into silent screams of horror around yellowed teeth and blackened tongues.
Months ago the abbey had run out of sheets to spare for wrapping the dead, and
months before that the graveyards had been filled to capacity as the Black
Plague had begun to sweep its way through France in the winter of 1348. All that could be done now was to chip out
burial pits in the frozen earth. Some villages had been spared, while some, like the one
nearest to the abbey, had been blighted entirely. Abandoned houses creaked and
groaned as the wet wind passed through open doors and windows, wafting up the
stench of mud and rot and rustling the stained rags and hair of the corpses
within. Rats and ravens were the only
creatures that survived at first, thriving and feasting upon the flesh of the
dead. And then came the dogs, feasting on the rest and claiming it for their
own. Entire villages became filled with packs of mongrels, leaving little more
than bones. No one knew just how many had been lost; no one came near those
god-forsaken places. Back in that horrible storage room, I lay in a troubled
half-sleep. My starving body convulsed gently from time to time, my back
arching and legs curling until my raw heels dug into the mattress beneath me,
disrupting the insects within it. Black and purple patches on my arms and legs
looked like spills of ink, my fingers and hands completely black as if I had
apprenticed to a book maker. Of course I had had no such formal training. I was
barely more than a girl and I'd come from a poor farming family in
Montfort-sur-Risle. With all of them lost to the plague I had walked alone for
days towards the Abbaye Notre-Dame du Bec in Le Bec-Hellouin. There I had been
clothed and fed and put to work tending to the sick. Many had thought that I'd
been blessed with immunity. The sickness seemed to pass me by for weeks as I
comforted the dying. Yet in time I, too, began to feel ill. Terrified, I'd
hidden my discolorations beneath long sleeves for as long as I could, trying
desperately to hide the truth from everyone including myself, but in the end
the swellings at my throat had betrayed me. Writhing on my bed, my thinning black hair stuck to my wet
skin, my naked, wasted body hurting no matter what position I took. Only one
slim window allowed in the night air, and in the moonlight I could see the
stacks of the dead all around me. Through my hazy vision I could see that my
keepers had left me there with no intention of tending to my comfort; they had
left me there to die. Fear overcame my
pain and made me lucid, the fog of my fever dream brushed away as I forced my
body to move. For nearly ten minutes I grit my teeth and shifted slowly, my
muscles sluggishly obeying me in bits and pieces until I finally got to my
numbed and gangrenous feet. Every step ached from the knees up, my muscles
tight for want of all the water I was sweating away. I thought that if only I
could get out I might have a chance, having no plan beyond getting past the
closed door. Perhaps such a plan was foolish, but I was delirious at the time
and thought, "who would know that I was here if I died in this room? Would
God? Even in his own house, would He think to look for me among so many dead in
this small space?" I shuffled weakly towards the heavy door, reaching towards
the handle with my bruised and claw-like fingers. The pain of forcing my dying
hands to grip the handle made me sob with the effort. My heart stopped in my
chest when the door didn't budge, locked from the outside by the Friar and his
acolyte. My scream of despair was little more than a dry screech, like the
death-cry of a rabbit. Incensed and desperate to get out, all I could manage to
do was lean lightly against the wood, shaking with fatigue. What's worse, my hands wouldn't let go of the handle, bound
there in a death grip. “I am dying...” I
gasped, sinking slowly to my knees as I still gripped the door. “I am dying! Oh
God, please help me!” There was hardly enough water left in my body for my
voice to be any louder than a whisper. My clammy forehead pressed against the
old wood in despair and I husked, “Please do not forget me, my Lord. Please do
not let me die alone, here. Not like this.” I felt so entirely betrayed by my
creator that I was certain only Hell waited for me. A breeze trickled in through the window, its caress
serpentine and cool as it slid around the room, disrupting the stale air. The
moonlight was soon obscured by a growing shadow, as if something wanted the
celestial light all for its own. A voice, slight and young, issued from the
center of the room to ask sweetly, “How, then, would you prefer to die, ma
chère fille?” My dry eyes creaked in their sockets as I turned my gaze
towards the speaker, whereupon I saw a small child, a girl hardly older than
ten. I froze in shock; where had she come from? Didn't she know the danger
here? Couldn't she smell the putrefaction? “How did you get in?” I croaked,
swallowing past the tight and painful swellings in my neck. “I come and go as I please.” A cloak hid her features from
the moonlight, and only the curve of her cheek and her innocent mouth were
barely visible. The shadow of wings rose and fell behind her, though no such
limbs were visible to my eye. “But you have not answered my question. If this
death is not acceptable, then what death would be?” As I stared at her until my body, seized by a light
convulsion, wrenched my hands free of their grip on the door. My body curled up
on the cold floor like an insect as I struggled to breathe. From this vantage
point I watched the girl approach on feet clad in silk slippers. The girl's
entire body was covered and warmed by a long matching cloak, red like her
shoes. Gathering up her skirts, the girl crouched by my wretched body,
examining me with eyes that held only mild interest and no traces of pity, eyes
that were entirely black and featureless, inhuman wells that consumed rather
than expressed any emotion. Such dark pits were set into a face painted like a
decorated skull. The mask of death upon the unearthly child frightened me,
even more than the fact that I was minutes from dying. Was this an angel sent
to me in my final hour? Did it matter? I don't know if I actually said these
words aloud or merely thought them, but I vaguely remember my words: “Anything
but this.” The girl crouching above me narrowed her eyes and then
finally closed them, inclining her head solemnly as if in acquiescence. Her
right hand lifted towards the wall where the piles of corpses were stacked and
a quick flick of the child's wrist and a spread of her fingers sent a sharp,
audible crack into the stone, a glowing blue fissure looking like the welt of a
whip's lash. A harsh growl of grating stone purred into the cold night air as
the two halves of the crack pulled apart, the wall little more than a privacy
screen. The stacked bodies nearby trembled and slid stiffly down to the floor,
and one came to rest almost face to face with me. I gasped and tried to move
away, lifting my gaze from the pruned eyes of the corpse to the new doorway.
Beyond the widening aperture I could see a hallway lit with candle light. Even lying upon the floor in a nest woven of death and ruin,
I marveled at this new portal. My strength was leaving me and my pain was
great, but to see such magic distracted me from the torment at the very end. At
first I didn't notice when the small child reached down with her right hand,
fingers and palm still outspread, and placed it over the greatest swelling on
my neck. A pervasive feeling of soothing cool flowed through me, and my
swellings subsided and disappeared altogether, and the pain in my arms and legs
went away. Even my wasted flesh filled out once again and my terrible need for
food and drink was gone. I looked at myself in amazement as I sat up, and it
looked as if I'd never been sick. In a pool of fluid nearby I could see my
reflection and stared at it in amazement. My hair was once again lustrous,
black, and draped down to my mid-back, and my skin was lightly tanned once
more, and now longer the sallow color of an aging candle. No longer were my
eyes sunken pits staring down the days until death, but once more wide and
beautiful sapphire gems ringed by full lashes and set beneath dark brows. I could hardly believe what was happening to me as I
cautiously rose to my feet, feeling no pain for the first time in weeks. By my
side the mysterious girl rose up and proceeded towards the cleft in the wall.
It was an impossible gap, for as soon as I approached the new passage I could
see out the window right beside it. There was no new hallway on the outside.
There was nothing there at all. Only moonlight bathed the miserable
countryside, thawing slowly into a terrible spring. The expansive Abbey seemed
like a palace amidst the dark, naked forest, its pale walls gleaming in the
sickly light like boiled bones rising from blackened meat. Only a few monks
were working outside beneath a small lantern, laboring to till the frozen earth
for a new burial pit at the edge of the skeletal trees. “Ma chère,” called the girl, who stood now at the threshold
of this mysterious hallway. Beneath the skull makeup her unnatural eyes
narrowed in expectation, waiting upon my decision like a parent waits upon the
fickle desires of a toddler. I turned away from the window, closing my eyes. The shadow
of death seemed to press down over the entire countryside like a suffocating
black shroud. There was nothing out there to hope for; the world was ending.
God had given his children all the chances they were ever to have, and he had
grown tired of continual disappointment. Surely that was the cause of all this,
wasn't it? With one last breath, I took up my stained, woolen blanket and
wrapped it around my body, joining the little girl as we both began to walk
into the hallway together. © 2023 SEBrunson |
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Added on August 24, 2023 Last Updated on August 24, 2023 Tags: horror, short story, paranormal Author |