Black Death Excerpt
So this was a little thing I did to get me into the mood of writing and I liked it so much that I started to make an outline and this will probably become a novel once I finish the other one. This is mid-way through the novel, and the mercenary framed for the murder of his brother is lamenting in an inn. Enjoy and, as always, have a great day/night =)
Also, if you want me to do a request of yours I am more than willing, just drop me a PM or email ([email protected]
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The fox sat
on the edge of the pale blue bed with a small dark journal as black as his fur.
Names of people, dozens of names, were written in the journal. He surveyed the
name at the top of the list, encircled in red ink. His mind wearily searched backwards
in time to find something, anything, which would give him a clue as to who the
person was. But he could not focus. The noise of the midnight drunks echoed
throughout the ancient house. Its dark oak walls creaked with dread as someone
let out a hearty laugh. The shadows on the floor from the lantern danced to the
melody of the voices below. Throughout
all the noise, there was a light knocking at the door that led to the hall. The
fox perked his ears and stood straight, but all he could hear was the people
downstairs. He was probably hearing things again. He focused again on the name,
that name that was etched into his mind. Every time he thought of the name, the
past forced its way into his mind. He would try and quell the unending battle
of his conscience with rationalizations of, it
wasn't your fault to you had no other
choice. Though he knew he had had another way out. There is always another
way out. But all those lives taken. All those innocents hurt. He had a choice,
but he chose the cowards way out. The fox peered over to the lantern on the
dresser beside the bed. The fire. That unending flame. The screams. The
torment. The- A light
knock sounded at the door again. This time he gracefully got up and to the door
in four long steps, making no sound. He placed one large black ear on the solid
wood. He could hear no one, except for the people. There was no one outside. He
slowly opened the door to an empty, dark hallway. Portraits of different
species lined the walls coupled with landscapes of different lands. Five doors
down, the hallway cut to the right and the fox thought he saw a fleeing shadow.
Without hesitating, he pursued the shadow, only armed with a dagger hidden in
his leather belt. He got to the end of the hallway and again, he saw the shadow
disappear down yet another hallway. After the third hallway, the figure
lingered, challenging him to follow. And he did. Down twisting passages to the
point where he did not know where he was. He had lost the figure, and even if
it was right in front of him, he would never be able to see. The darkness in
this part of the house was deafening. Only a couple times had he ever
experienced true darkness like this, and that was in the catacombs with Nardo.
But even though he had been surrounded by dead bodies for hours on end, this
blackness was much more eerie. The fox wandered dizzily for a few yards,
bumping into tables a couple of times, before emerging into a good sized
mahogany painted room. The room was
illuminated by a large fireplace that cast shadows onto the portraits. The
walls were decorated with paintings and portraits of wolves, wearing warrior's
armor and monarch's robes. There were large windows that ran from the floor to
the ceiling, a large column separating them. He could hear the rain hit the
windows with a ping sound, but he had not heard rain before he came in. Something
whispered next to him. He looked down and a little wolf pup was staring up at
him. He looked dirty, like he had been out on the street for weeks. The fox had
to wrinkle his nose at the smell of him. The fox was about to ask where the pup
came from, but the wolf looked past him and upwards. He turned and followed the
wolf's gaze. As soon as he saw it, he
forgot the wolf was even in the room. It was a painting of a village. Young
foxes were running around wooden homes in a small clearing of a pine forest.
Older foxes working in the large field next to the village or washing clothes
in the river that ran through. From here, the village took the shape of a
broken heart. And in the middle, near the river breaking the two halves of the
heart, a black fox sat alone with a small blue jay. His violet eyes stared down into the river,
but the eyes in the river were as red as blood. "Stunning.
Isn't it?" a low, feminine voice called from behind. The fox turned and a
grey female wolf sat in the large leather chair near the fireplace. She had not
been there before. And where did that pup go? "Valentino DeGellari painted
it." The name
sent a chill down his spine. But he would not give the figure any hint of what
was going through his head. "Who are you?" the fox asked. "The
owner of this house of course," she said, getting up from her seat. Her
long red dress fell to her ankles which were adorned in diamonds, like her
ears. "You and your friends have been most welcome here. We do not get
many mercenaries here. You are a sight to behold." She was
slowly walking towards him, and he had to take two steps back. "I do not
know what you are talking about, signora,"
the fox said. "Mmm.
Italian. You are special." He
had backed up to where his naked fur touched the cool glass of the windows. He
could feel the vibrations of the rain on his back. "Oh, do not be afraid.
I swear I will not hurt you that badly." She was nose
to nose with him before pressing herself against him. He did not feel any
sensation but that unmistakable sense of an impending end to someone's life.
One paw brushed the cerements covering his upper chest. She brushed over the
scar down the center of his chest and lingered there for a few seconds before
continuing downwards. She wrapped her other arm around his waist and looked
into his violet eyes. "I know where you hid the book." Before he
could say anything, she had unhooked the dagger from his belt. The wolf tried
to catch him in his side but the fox was too fast. He grabbed her arm and spun
her around. He placed the dagger up to her throat and held her there. She
struggled and screamed something in a language he did not know. "If you
know who I am, then you would know not to start something with me, signora." She pulled
away from him and brandished her own blade, a small kitchen knife. She looked
at him, her emerald eyes twinkling red in the glow of the fire. She brought the
knife up, exposing her vitals. She lunged at him but he caught her arm with his
free paw. He threw his dagger into her gut and pulled up. He felt the warm
liquid flow onto his paw and splatter onto his pants. Her knife clattered to
the floor and her arm went limp. He looked into her shocked green eyes, his
expression professional and serious. She coughed out the words, "We have
your scent, traitor." He spun
around and flung her onto the glass before kicking her square in the back. He
did not know if the crack was her spin or the glass shattering. The glass
exploded into a firework of white, showering him with sharp snowflakes. She was
gone in a second, with a thud coming from below. He looked over the ledge and
looked down at the broken body bloodied in the rain. Her body, twisted and in
contorted, spew blood onto the dust. Blood flowed from her body and formed a
crimson flower around her. The rain chilled his heart, but he felt no remorse.
"We will see who has who's scent, signora,"
he whispered. He was still
staring down at her when a little voice spoke up behind him. "Is...is she
dead?" The fox
turned. The little pup had returned and looked at him with a small twinkle in
his eyes. "You should not be here, piccolo.
Go back to your family." He looked
confused by the word. "Family?" he asked. "My family is...I
don't know where they are." "Well
you better go find them," the fox said. He walked past the pup and to the
doorway. The pup
called after him. "What's your name, mister?" The fox paused. He
looked back at the pup who stared back at him. "Are you the man they call
the Black Death?" "You
should not listen to children's stories, piccolo." When he
turned and took a step forward, the pup grabbed onto his stained linen pants.
"What is your name, Mister?" The fox
looked curiously down at the wolf. He had on a little grin and his eyes were
shining red in the glow of the fireplace. "My name?" The wolf nodded
and the fox sighed. He gave a small bow and said, "My name is Valentino
DeGellari." "Like
the guy from the painting." "Nothing
like that man," he spat the word
out. The wolf
cocked his head. "I do not understand." "Let us
keep it that way, piccolo." Was
the last thing he said before disappearing into the dark. The wolf looked after
him but saw nothing. Except for a few seconds when he saw two violet eyes
glancing back at him before they were sucked back into the darkness. The wolf
smiled. "Valentino DeGellari. We have your scent."