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Iris's Guardian (White Tigers of Brigantia Book 2) by Lisa Daniels (69)

Chapter Five

“She’s found us,” Faye said.  “Must have been unhappy to find you’d escaped.”

“You’re telling me,” Aizen said, his yellow eyes wide in alarm.  Faye extracted the unstrung Ice Bow from her sleeve and prepared herself for action.  She didn’t want to be turned to ice again, to lose another few centuries or more in the grasp of this horrid, tiny ice witch.  They heard her cackling through the halls, her voice magnified by some sort of spell.

“Now, now, me dearies, where’s me dragon, where’s me little princess that escaped…?  I’ll find ye… oh yes, I will!”

“She’s fucking crazy,” Aizen said, actually shivering in fear.  “And insanely strong!”

Faye privately agreed.  Any witch who could cast this kind of spell on a whim was not someone you wanted to mess with.  Only the enchantments protecting the treasury had prevented them from following the same fate, but as they walked along, Aizen’s movements became sluggish.  He glanced down at his feet in horror, realizing that the ice had started creeping up his veins.

“I’m being frozen!”  He checked Faye, who still strode with relative ease over the floor.  “But you’re not.”

Faye shrugged.  The warmth from the bow emanated inside her.  “It’s my weapon.  It’s shielding me.  I –”  She turned to face Aizen, and stiffened when she saw the ice shooting up his body, wrapping around his throat, mouth, nose and eyes, before expanding outwards into a solid block.  Whatever words he intended to say were frozen on the tip of his tongue, and Faye realized she was horribly, irrevocably, alone.

She examined him for a moment before squeezing her Ice Bow.  It gave a reassuring melody and an extra wave of heat in her skin. 

“Not these statues up here,” the witch’s voice came out in a sing-song way, followed by that girlish snigger.  “Or these ones here!  Oh, where are you, little dragon, little princess?”  A short pause.  “Perhaps I’ll make the whole castle my own, as revenge for your escape.  Always thought I’d need a change of scenery.  It does get rather boring when no one wants to visit you anymore…”

Faye prowled carefully through the castle, which she still knew like the back of her hand, careful, calculating, barely making a sound, except for her breaths and the chime of her feet when she stepped down too hard.

The ice witch’s voice kept drifting back, taunting her, mocking her ability to do anything.

“So many dragons here!  Why, I could make a whole army of dragon souls.  Mm… yes…”

Stepping into the banquet room, with the empty tables covered with blue tablecloths, Faye spotted the ice witch.  Alicifer saw Faye walk in and her eyebrows popped up in surprise.  “Oh!  There’s the little princess!”  She gave a gurning smile.  “Not frozen?  You know, I’ve been wondering for a few days now how you could have broken the curse.  You showed no magical spark all that time… and now suddenly, you break it?”  Before she finished speaking, she shot out a bolt of blue energy towards Faye.  The princess blocked it with her bow, which chimed in anger.  Now Alicifer stared at the bow.  “What’s this?”

Faye didn’t bother answering.  She retracted with her arm, and a shining blue arrow materialized in the bow’s notch.  Alicifer gaped, before letting out a squeal as the bolt shivered towards her.  She flung up a shield, but the arrow ignored the shield as if it was made of nothing, and she needed to dodge frantically.  The arrow continued following her, and she was only able to stop it by vanishing at the very last second and reappearing elsewhere.  “Skies, child, how did you get your hands on one of those?”

Alicifer appeared furious rather than frightened.  She jerked out her fingers, and Faye felt a strong, invisible tug on her bow.  She resisted, and shot off more arrows, making the witch curse.  While Alicifer was busy dodging, Faye had the time to charge up multiple arrows at once, before fanning them through the room. 

A shard of ice slammed into her hand, making Faye gasp.  She dropped the bow and it instantly slithered to the woman’s palms.  However, the witch couldn’t stay still, unable to stop the arrows directly.  She teleported a few meters at a time to dodge.

“Wish I’d mastered long distance teleportation,” Alicifer panted.  “Why are these arrows still following me?”  She attempted to draw the bow back to fire at Faye, who was pinned to the floor, but nothing happened.  “Why aren’t you freezing?”

Faye didn’t know, but the warmth in her grew stronger.  With a supreme effort, she yanked her hand away from the ground, whimpering in pain, before rolling to her feet and charging after the witch.  She rolled and dodged more bolts, calling for the bow to return to her.

The bow cried out in a mournful note, clearly trying to move out of the ice witch’s hands. 

“Oh, you’re one of them,” Alicifer said in utter disgust.  “The royal family that once married one of my ancestors, getting the touch of ice.  Took you long enough to defrost, didn’t it?”

Faye didn’t have time for banter.  She launched herself at the woman, who dematerialized, and several of Faye’s arrows hovered in confusion before she willed them to keep chasing the witch.  It seemed that the massive ice spell the witch had cast, along with her quick teleports, drained her of energy.  But if she decided to teleport through the walls, well, that was it.  Faye focused on the Ice Bow, her neck tendons straining until, with a cry of triumph, the bow ripped itself from the ice witch’s hands and happily spun back into Faye’s.

“Shit,” Alicifer said.  Her attempts to resummon the bow no longer worked.  Her ice shards were now effectively blocked by the bow.

“I do hope killing you releases the curse,” Faye said, redrawing the bow and firing.  “And if not, well, I kind of want to kill you anyway.”

“Oh, bother,” the witch said, before snapping her fingers.  The ice started melting from everything, and she turned herself into an ice block as the arrows smashed into it. 

“What do you want, girl?” the witch said from within the block.  “Riches?  A nice prince from my collection?  Speak up.  I know when I’m beaten.”  Alicifer appeared rather exhausted as she said this, wiping her brow inside the ice.

Faye walked closer to the exhausted witch, her eyes crackling in fury.  “Remove the curse from every single person you’ve ever cursed.  Return Aizen’s dragon soul.  And take up residence elsewhere.  That includes the people in this castle and the people in your little cave.”

“Bother,” the witch repeated, appearing cross.  “That’s me entire livelihood gone.  I’ve been collecting them for a few hundred years, me.  Breaks me heart to lose it.”

“Maybe you shouldn’t be putting out a fake Quest, then,” Faye snapped.  “Earn your collection by reputable means.  Offer an actual reward for people to risk themselves.  And maybe you’ll get more visits.”

“Hmph.”  Alicifer thought this over for a moment. 

“Or you can die,” Faye offered.

The witch rolled her eyes.  “Fine.  Take yer stupid frozen friends.  Be mean to a poor old witch.”

Faye snorted, but kept her bow trained on the witch.  She ignored her throbbing, pierced hand, which had been so frozen, the blood inside didn’t bleed out. 

With a lot of muttering and grumbling, the witch kept to her forced deal, unfreezing everyone in the castle, returning Aizen’s soul, and promising to unfreeze everyone in the cave. 

“I’ll be checking tomorrow,” Faye warned, allowing a blue bolt to shimmer.  “If you double cross me, I will hunt you down and kill you.  I will tell everyone in the world how to kill you, and you won’t be safe anywhere you go.”

Alicifer glared with malice at Faye, but nodded, before limping out of the castle, summoning an ice broomstick which took a few moments to assemble, mounting it, and flying off into the distance.

Instantly, Faye walked through the thawing corridors back to Aizen in the throne room.  He, his parents, and the few servants in the room lay gasping, still feeling the shock of cold over their bodies. 

She ran to Aizen’s side and touched him on the shoulder.  “I dealt with it.  You’ll have your soul back.”

Aizen shivered, before smiling at her in incredulous delight and grasping her close.  “You did?  Oh, you wonderful creature.”  He planted cold lips on hers, and she sighed into the touch.  Happy to help him.  Happy to be here. 

She needed to check in on the cave tomorrow and help out Anthony and the rest.  She was going to be pretty busy, she suspected, over the next few weeks.  But she certainly wouldn’t mind sticking along with Aizen for longer.

“Why do you have the Ice Bow, princess?”  Aizen’s father barked.  He sounded rather weak from the freezing.  Faye’s hand began to throb harder – she needed a healer soon. 

“Uh, let me explain, father,” Aizen wheezed, getting to his feet.  Faye stood by his side, smiling. 

Ready to take steps into her future.  Ready to help the others in the cave adapt.  And maybe, sticking next to Aizen, pursuing the fledgling relationship they’d started to develop, she could finally come to terms with what had happened, and the future she now existed in.

The Ice Bow hummed contentment in her hand. 

I’m ready.

 

 

The End

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Anya’s Freedom

Found by the Dragon – Book 1

by Lisa Daniels

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter One

Anya wiped sweat from her brow, struggling to stay upright.  Her arms ached.  Her hands were raw from holding the scythe, which she craved to turn upon her masters. 

She hated working on the plantations.  She hated every single cotton plant she saw, and the wheat fields the scythe needed to swipe through.  Every human hated this place, if they had any sense in their bodies.  But it wasn't like humans had much of a choice, being slaves and all. 

The only thing everyone hated more than the bone-breaking work, the relentless sun beating on them from above, and the muddy ditches for when the rains fell – were their overlords. 

In this world, stuck in the prison of a plantation, being a human meant a life sentence.  You worked and sweated until you dropped dead, or when one of the masters got bored and decided they required some sport.  An overseer passed the group of humans working now, an apathetic look on his face, steely yellow eyes scouring for signs of slacking.  Anya saw his hand twitch slightly to the whip belted at his side.  He didn't own any other weapons.  He didn't need to.  Inside his human exterior lay a monster.  A great, fanged and wingless serpent which looked down on all humans it enslaved.  A wyrm.  All wyrms had the same ominous yellow eyes, and the cruel slant to their faces, as if merely looking at a human triggered the well of hate sealed within. 

They saw humans as stupid, lazy, and disposable, and Anya couldn’t remember a time when the wyrms hadn’t been in power.  It seemed to her like the wyrms had ruled the world forever, hurt the humans forever.  Her grandpa spoke of his grandma talking about the cruel treatment of their masters.  They spoke of how one step out of line might get you beaten to death – and skies forbid that you were an attractive woman.

If a wyrm decided to take a woman, no one ever saw them again.  Anya's mother explained why.  She said that the wyrms weren't allowed to have children with women, so the moment one became pregnant, they got executed.  Anything to stop their blood mixing with the humans.  But not enough to stop them from committing their atrocities in the first place.

Why can't they just leave us alone?  Hideous creatures. Anya swiped harder at the wheat in front of her, grunting as she did so.  Others did the same thing on either side of her.  Each were careful not to get ahead of one another, in case it prompted their overseer to decide upon defining a new speed.  And if someone lagged behind too much... then they risked getting beaten, which would put them behind more.  Which might then get them killed.

Anya bared her teeth, simmering in resentment.  Thoughts boiled in her head of the idea of vengeance, of taking up arms, of storming through the wyrm mansions and stabbing them to death as they slept.  Of course, those rotten beasts transformed into giant lizards, making it significantly harder to stab anything through them – but if you caught one by surprise...

She vented out her frustration instead on the wheat.  Always careful to not get ahead.  Careful, sometimes, to slow down a fraction of a pace if she suspected someone getting too tired.  She or someone else would use a special downward stroke signal to tell the others within eyeshot to do the same.  The wyrms hadn't figured out the system yet.  And the humans did what they could to survive.  To keep each other alive for as long as possible.

Anya also did everything in her power to look ugly, along with the other women in her plantation.  The foolish and vain ones got taken first, tossed about in the lordling’s quarters like a doll.

In a way this helped the humans, since it meant their future generations would be too ugly to be of any aesthetic use to the wyrms.  Except some might just choose to fuck with you anyway, because they could.  You could never quite prevent everything.  Just reduce the chances as much as possible.

Everything Anya did had been passed to her by her mother and her grandpa.  They knew all the tricks, all the ways to make their miserable lives that little bit easier.  Anya smeared mud on her face, kept her bucket washes to a minimum, let her hair grow untidy and unkempt, and always slouched and hooded her eyes.  She also pulled peculiar expressions whenever a wyrm addressed her, though sometimes it got her whipped.  Under the advice of her mother as well as most other women, she bound her breasts, which had started inconveniently erupting out of her chest at the age of thirteen. 

“You have to reduce all signs you’re a fertile, pretty woman,” Kendra would say, perhaps while stuffing wild, repugnant-smelling garlic inside her daughter’s mouth.  “Can’t be taking any risks.  Don’t want you being taken like my last one.”

Last one.  Humans tried to have as many children as possible because they knew most of them would die.  Anya’s oldest sister got taken when she was eleven and never returned.  One of her younger brothers died of the illness that ravaged the serf village just outside the plantation, which made the gracious Lord Osmer whip his serfs even harder to get the harvest produce he required.  Now Anya’s family – five children, including her – worked extra hard to help provide for their single remaining grandfather.  The youngest of course couldn’t work, but the eight- and ten-year-olds could.  If the wyrms decided to focus any of their ire upon Grandpa Horace, because he no longer could physically do the work in the fields, he'd die. 

Horace managed to survive in other ways, though.  He helped look after some of the youngest children while their parents went out to work.  He helped cook in the village.  So, although he didn't work on the plantations, they saw him still being marginally useful.

Anya didn't want to think about the day when her grandpa could no longer hold a stirring ladle properly, or keep a child under control.  It might be two months, it might be two years.  But everyone broke down in the end.

She considered now her family.  Anya never knew her father.  Humans often didn’t form proper relationships, unless they were determined to risk loss for the sake of love.  Her mother didn’t mind.  It was their way, the way of many men and women here.  The ones who did stick together were treated with grudging respect.  The ones who lost, however, broke down the hardest.  You saw enough people grinding their knuckles into the dust, their eyes bloated from tears, to know the costs.  Not all prices were worth paying.

Their masters, of course, encouraged large families, so they could have more serfs without needing to buy from auctions.  It also gave the wyrms something to kill every now and then for entertainment, as the humans struggled to accommodate and feed themselves.

Everything boiled down to those blasted wyrms in the end.  If they weren't around, if they didn't do all of this shit, humans would be free.  Humans could live in cities without fear of persecution, feed their families, live beautiful lives and relationships.  All Anya did was dream and dream of escape, to find a way out of this terrible scenario, before it ground her into nothing. 

She considered fleeing to one of the cities.  Although she’d still be a second-class citizen, at least she’d have more nooks and crannies to hide in, or could set up business as a respectable merchant in the slums.  She’d only visited the city once, helping to carry things for her lord, and saw the streets and the stalls and the rickety houses.  Better than her current life, working on the fields, shivering in little huts.

City dwellers didn't know how good they got it.  They didn't have the whip cracking at their backs, and the fear of death burnt into their souls.

The wyrm watching them now decided that the humans were working too slowly.  He cracked his whip menacingly.  “Work faster, the crops won’t harvest themselves!  You get food and homes, you should repay the kindness of your lord by producing more!”  Again, he flicked that accursed whip.  Anya knew what it felt like to have such a thing lash across her skin, leaving welts and sometimes blood across her muscles, and deep bruises that stayed for days afterwards.  Unlike the serfs, dressed in rags and cobbled-together clothes, the overseer wore finely tailored garments, from a linen blouse to a red waistcoat, along with black breeches, white socks and shoes.  His angular face lingered on Anya for a moment, who had momentarily slowed in her work.  Then he sneered. 

“Filthy animal.”  He slashed the whip over her back, and she cringed, before speeding up her work, dreaming of swinging the scythe at him and cleaving his entitled behind in two.

If only she was stronger.  If only she had some kind of magic that could help her take them down with ease.  If fucking only.  Barring that, Anya wanted to whisk her entire family away, run out of the plantations, and find some isolated place in the middle of nowhere.  Maybe then nothing would interfere, and they could live there for the rest of their days.

The desire fuelled her dreams at night, kept driving her through the day.  Her heart was young – it desired a better life.  It believed in a better world, unlike the adults who had been beaten down into submission.  Her mother warned her of that spirit eventually leaking out of her, with more years pressed upon her skin, bones and soul.  A depressing thought, really.  What was the point in living at all, if nothing mattered?  If they just lived to the whims of their masters, and died in squalor and misery?

It's not right.  It's not fucking right.  The thought stirred up a furious passion in Anya.

At sundown, they were allowed to stop, though two people had collapsed from dehydration.  Anya didn’t think they’d be seeing those people again from the way the wyrms had converged upon them, whips swishing menacingly.  She went back to the village, where the dwindling community gathered in their self-designated leader’s house – there to help soothe moods and fight despair.  They needed to fight the evil somehow.

Inside the leader's hut, the complaints began.  Aching backs, burnt skins.  Elder Tam helped where he could.  People helped treat one another with the remedies they knew, though many of their community also preferred to stay in their homes, not wanting to risk any wrath if the wyrms took offense to these gatherings.  For some people, these gatherings kept them above water.  Just from having others to care once the scythes had been placed down, and the soils tilled.

Anya watched as her mother took a salve to help treat her burns.  Anya looked at the gaunt, beaten-down faces of people who had lost all willpower to fight.  The despair left a tight knot inside, a heat that coursed through her veins, waiting to unleash itself in furious energy.  Seeing their rejected expressions made her want to slap their faces out of it.  Wake them up somehow.  Any chance of making a rousing, heroic speech would be greeted with blank stares and fear.  Anya knew the drill, because she’d tried a few times before.  Still, for the sake of it, she raised her voice above the murmurs.  Because their faces disgusted her, and the defeat that weighed upon their souls made a voice in the back of her head scream soundlessly at the misery.

“Every day I come back home and I see bruised bodies and ruined souls.”  Her speech drifted over the susurrations.  People always spoke quietly, afraid of the wyrms' sensitive hearing.  Most didn't bother listening.  “Every day I see children starving and elders hiding.  Every day could be our last day, and yet we let these masters do as they wish to us, we let them break our bones and our minds and our souls.  When does it stop?  When does all this stop?”  Anya waved her hand across the tightly packed room.  A few of the younger adults nodded with her, but the elders ignored her, and several couples gave her a rude gesture. 

“Oh, shut up, will you?” a man said, scowling at Anya.  “You’ll get us in trouble, wench.”

“I’m sick of this treatment!”  Anya fired back, standing her ground.  “And I’m sick of people like you treating your fellow humans like they’re nothing.  We get enough of that from the overseers.  Do you have no pride?  Are you a craven husk of a creature, scrabbling for scraps in the dark?”

More murmurs.  “You should be quiet,” Kendra whispered, tugging on Anya’s shoulder.  She had some bandages trailing from her hands, and blood spots upon her wrists.  “You can’t draw attention to yourself.”

“Quiet,” an older woman said, backing the man.  She was wizened, with muddy blue eyes, rubbing at a tender spot on her wrist.  “You won’t get anything out of this lot, child.  It’s admirable that you're not broken yet.  Really.  But you can’t stir the broken.  You see these wretches here for yourself.  Some have families, some are just worried about getting food and not being hit.  They don’t have time to dream.”

Horrible words, but they made a kind of twisted sense.  Anya just wanted people to be happy for once.  To greet their days with smiles, because smiles lifted up the soul.  To fight against their masters, because surely, death and resilience were better than being a beaten mule.  “I’m not broken,” the man insisted, his dark eyes flashing.  “I’m just not stupid.  This is our lot.  We accept it or we die.”

Agreement from the others.  Anya let out a sigh.  She let her hands slump through her dirty hair.  So much mud over her body.  Her nostrils were long since immune to the odors. 

A man with dark eyes approached Anya from the side.  He stooped as he walked, and wobbled, as if in need of a walking stick, and hissed, “Listen, I’ll help you out, here.  You can’t keep doing this.  We may have informers, willing to rat out to the overseers for some extra bread.  You’re doing this too often.  I know it must hurt, but you can’t keep it up.  We’ve been like this for generations.  People like you have gone missing for speaking up.”  The man squeezed her shoulder, his brown eyes sad.  He had scars all along his bare legs.  “I seen it happen to my brother.  A rat sold him out for extra meals for a month.”  Come to mention it, some of the people here had intense, sly eyes, the kind that sought opportunities wherever they appeared.

Anya grit her teeth, not satisfied with any of the answers.  The oppressive atmosphere of the room stifled her, dragging her down into its pit.  No one here wanted to do anything.  No one cared.  They just wanted to be left alone, to sleep, to eat, to do their jobs without interference.  Afraid of the whip, afraid of an overseer’s wrath.  Always fucking afraid.

It made her sick to her stomach.  She loathed the fear, simply because she made a choice at a young age.  A logical choice.  If she didn’t like something, then she needed to change it.  There was no point staying with what you hated.

Kendra encouraged that thinking, hoping to preserve that fresh youth of Anya's for as long as possible.  Distracting her from the grim reality of a world that crushed humans down into the mud.

Yet the years dribbled by, and Anya's measly attempts at stirring the populace amounted to naught.  Whenever she grabbed a few people’s minds, something atrocious happened to grind them back into the dirt again.  Her dreams of escape always got thwarted, too.  The traders who passed through didn’t want anything to do with anyone in the villages, other than bartering goods out of them.  She'd tried offering them anything she could, and a few clearly wanted to use her for other things, or planned to sell her on to the next twisted master. 

Nothing felt worthwhile.  Nothing worked if you were a vulnerable serf without any powerful lords backing you up.

Anya felt the influence of despair pressing onto her, teasing her into its clutches.  She worried if she kept this up, she’d become the very people she pitied and despised.

She went to bed hungry, dirty, worn out, knowing she’d need to get up at first light tomorrow to do exactly the same thing.  Her mother, grandpa, and four younger siblings slumbered in the tiny hut, with barely any room to move.  Two infant boys, snuffling.  Two older girls with lank, short hair, and faces as filthy as Anya’s.

None of them had names, but Anya gave them some, anyway.  Sniffle for the oldest girl, Tantrum for the next, and the babies were Chub and Podge.  Their unique characteristics contributed to the names. 

“When youse make it past ten years of age, then youse deserve names,” Kendra told them.  “Names go to the living.  And you prove you are worthy to live by the gods themselves when you make it.  Took the gods ten years to make our world, after all.”

Anya didn't believe a word of it.  She didn't think such a concept like gods existed, simply because they allowed everyone here to suffer.  What kind of bastard did you need to be to accept such things happening?

Sleep never came easy to Anya.  The sounds and movements of her siblings made it hard to drift off, though she'd had a lot of practice.

And a lot of discomfort.

She finally managed a bite of sleep.  At least, until the cries came out in the middle of the night, sending Anya bolt upright.  Her mother and siblings had awoken, and peered outside the hut.  Then, her mother rushed to Anya, face drained of all color.  “Overseers.  They’re rifling through the huts right now.  Looking for dissenters.  You gotta get out.  You gotta escape.”

“What?”  It didn’t make sense.  What dissenters?  “I did nothing wrong.  Why do you think it's me they're looking for?”

“It was your speech.  I reckon someone reported you,” her mother sobbed, blue eyes clouded with tears, wrinkled face grieving as if she’d already lost her daughter.  Her mother acted terrified, and the terror seeped into Anya as well.  “Oh, you were my prettiest, my brightest, and we hid you so well, but you couldn’t hide yourself.”  Kendra let out a whimper.  “Go, go now.  Through here – you gotta go through the pit.”

Trembling, confused, Anya was shoved to the back of the hut where a rug lay, and her mother lifted it up to reveal a small hole.  Tantrum and Sniffle hissed her on, and she squeezed through the hole in panic, landing in excrement and pee.  She heard her mother place the rug back over the gap, and tried not to retch as she clawed her way through the cesspit towards the small hole used for airing out the stench.  No.  Don't think about it.  Don't think about it–

She heard the door slam open in her former home, and raised voices bark, “Where’s that little bitch?  Is this her family?”

A murmur.  Was her mother crying?  Gods, were those monsters hurting her?  Anya's blood screamed out then, crying that it belonged to her mother, that she should go back and help her somehow.  But what could she do?  What the fuck could she do against an all-powerful wyrm?  Tears bit at her eyes.

“It is?  It better be, snitch.  Where are you hiding her, you filthy rats?”  A pause.  “Say, or I’ll kill the old man.  Say!”

A snitch.  Perhaps one of those sly men in the elder's house had decided killing Anya would be worth a few extra meals in his stomach.  Fuckers.  Anya choked back her despair as she fled, scrambling through the night, avoiding the areas lit by torches.  Her bare feet, slick with human waste, skidded across the dirt patches of their stomped-upon paths.  Small mud and thatch huts could be used as cover.  It helped that Anya barely reached over five feet tall and stood as thin as a rake – ducking into slits of shadow made it easier to hide.  She steered clear of a wyrm in his traditional form, towering above the huts.  He had a long, serpentine neck, a bulky body with four legs, sharp claws, and a twitching, jagged tail.  Spikes protruded from his back.  He thumped along the huts, evil yellow eyes glowing as he sniffed.  His scale color appeared dark in the moonlight, and his huge nostrils flared.

“Smells like a fucking bog in here,” he growled, lips curling in disgust.  He displayed his fangs.  “Disgusting little creatures.”

We have to be disgusting.  So you won't kill us for being pretty.  Anya tore past the village, now running through the wheat fields.  She made too much noise in her haste, swishing through the grain, rather than going at a crawl.  Any moment now, she expected to hear shouts.

“We got a runner here!  A runner!”  The outcry began like baying hounds, and now three full-form wyrms stamped after her, their legs eating up the distance.  The wheat scratched at Anya's tattered clothes, and sometimes she stepped wrong, tamping the fibers and sending stabs of pain through the soles of her feet.  Her breath ran ragged in her throat, and her lungs struggled to suck in enough air to keep going.  Anya made it through the wheat field and into the woodland, heart pounding, not wanting to think about what had happened to her family.  Please be alright.  Please be alright.  I know I’m not supposed to care, but I do.  Please…

Awful images flashed through her mind.  The babies, thrown across the room, so that they lay in lifeless bundles in the corner of the room.  Or her sisters, taken away to the mansion, never to return.  Or her mother, having done everything possible to protect her children, beaten or left for dead.  She didn't even want to think about what they'd do to her grandpa. 

Sobs hitched in her throat.  Terror consumed her thoughts, not for herself, but for the family she'd left behind.  The family she wasn't supposed to care about, because people tended to die too fast and too soon.  Dangerous to love, they said.  Dangerous to let your heart out of its box. 

The stamps grew louder.  She sped up, but couldn’t outrun them.  Not if they turned into huge wyrms, crossing the field in strides.  Not if they were trained soldiers, and she was just a poor, underfed serf.  Also, she smelled too distinctive, covered in manure.  Her only chance was to bury herself in something to hide her body and scent, and hope they passed her by. 

Don't think about them.  Keep that heart locked up tight.  Keep it away from everyone who wishes to harm it.

Her powerlessness chafed at her.  Why couldn't she do anything?  Why hadn't she braved the idea of wandering into the wilderness before, hoping to find a place away from all the fucking wyrms?

She yelped as she ran into a clearing and saw a man there.  Shit.  Shit!  He froze in shock as she sped past.  She didn’t look behind her.  Didn't want to risk it, didn't want to look back and maybe see him have those horrible yellow eyes.  She needed to keep running.

Part of her wanted to collapse at that point, and give up.  How did she expect to escape these monsters?  The stomps vibrated nearer.  Where from?  The guards chasing her, or the stranger in the woods, in a place he had no business being?  Whoever chased her, they shortened the gap.  Their stomps grew louder.  Her heart threatened to burst out of her chest.  She then heard a distinctive, cultured voice say, “Oh, bother.  Slow down!  Stop running!”

Her heart iced over.  Her blood became frozen crystal.  She glanced back to see the man running after her in the dark.  She sobbed in terror as he seized her by the wrist, easily outstripping her speed. 

“Sorry about this,” he said, before transforming.  “Wow, but you're really gross.  You know that, right?  Where did you land?  In a giant cow-pat?” 

Anya let out a piercing scream as talons encased her, and she heard the beat of wings as the monster carried her off the ground.