Branwen Morcant
Apr 29th, 2002, 01:30:07 AM
Night was slowly passing into day with an almost grim certainty, a traitorous shimmer of white already looming at the edge of the western horizon. Greyish-white fog, thick with moisture, covered the tips of the old majestic trees of the forest like an army of ghosts waging battle, flowing up into the lightening sky in the morning breeze; melting, merging with the skies up where light still had no power.
But deep down on the ground, where there was greenery and life in abundance, there it remained: the darkness of the night, and would do so for many hours; a safe haven for all of those hours' dark creations. The air was as thick down here as the fog was above; as cloying the mist that rose, wisp-like, from the grass and furze, the red-tinted earth - yet a different kind of thing it was, alltogether, a pale red in colour, leaving a coppery aftertaste behind. From deep within that never-ending layer of mist, occasionally, would come the blood-curdling scream, the dying gurgle, of some unfortunate creature drawing its last agonised breaths as another would make it his feast.
Thick with death it was, that wood, as on every morning; the night had claimed its victims in the neverending cycle of life, as it did every night. Nothing was different, and yet... yet something had been changed in the way of things, that night. Another creature had joined the hunt that night, had silently and secretly come amongst the old community of feral hunters; with a savage wildness it had preyed even on those when no weaker beasts would be found. The Old had accepted this; if not for itself, then for the hunger they all felt in the hunt; were they shy and suspicious of its nature at first, the thirst for blood they all felt brought them together, overcame all suspicion. So they hunted; the creature tore and shredded its victims apart, fiercer than any of the Old, leaving no more than meaty carcasses, devoid of blood.
Then the creature had left, as stealthily as it it had come, leaving no trace but a vague odour of unpleasantness amongst the old hunters of the wood; a feeling that stole back into their bones after the feeding frenzy was over. The suspicion returned, and with it, relief. Yes, they felt relieved when the other left, although they could not tell why. They knew by instinct that it had not been a usual occurrence, no ordinary hunter. And by that same instinct, they knew from deep within them that they would not welcome it again in their midst, as one of them. The unpleasantness grew.
But deep down on the ground, where there was greenery and life in abundance, there it remained: the darkness of the night, and would do so for many hours; a safe haven for all of those hours' dark creations. The air was as thick down here as the fog was above; as cloying the mist that rose, wisp-like, from the grass and furze, the red-tinted earth - yet a different kind of thing it was, alltogether, a pale red in colour, leaving a coppery aftertaste behind. From deep within that never-ending layer of mist, occasionally, would come the blood-curdling scream, the dying gurgle, of some unfortunate creature drawing its last agonised breaths as another would make it his feast.
Thick with death it was, that wood, as on every morning; the night had claimed its victims in the neverending cycle of life, as it did every night. Nothing was different, and yet... yet something had been changed in the way of things, that night. Another creature had joined the hunt that night, had silently and secretly come amongst the old community of feral hunters; with a savage wildness it had preyed even on those when no weaker beasts would be found. The Old had accepted this; if not for itself, then for the hunger they all felt in the hunt; were they shy and suspicious of its nature at first, the thirst for blood they all felt brought them together, overcame all suspicion. So they hunted; the creature tore and shredded its victims apart, fiercer than any of the Old, leaving no more than meaty carcasses, devoid of blood.
Then the creature had left, as stealthily as it it had come, leaving no trace but a vague odour of unpleasantness amongst the old hunters of the wood; a feeling that stole back into their bones after the feeding frenzy was over. The suspicion returned, and with it, relief. Yes, they felt relieved when the other left, although they could not tell why. They knew by instinct that it had not been a usual occurrence, no ordinary hunter. And by that same instinct, they knew from deep within them that they would not welcome it again in their midst, as one of them. The unpleasantness grew.