Share

A Werewolf for the Witch
A Werewolf for the Witch
Author: Cynthia Bells

#1 The Assassination

Avalea

Ann got away. She is safe.

Ann got away. She is safe.

I chant this over and over again in my mind as my feet carry me away in a direction they’ve deemed safe. My silk bedroom slippers are no match for the rough forest floor. Sharp pebbles and thorns tear at my feet, just as the low-lying branches are making short work of my nightgown. I’m covered in scrapes and bruises, and my tired legs stumble on a gnarly root that I failed to notice in the darkness. 

Neither of the two moons have made an appearance tonight. The canopy overhead is so thick that only the barest hint of the brilliant starlight is able to make its way through the gaps. How long I have been running I do not know, but I can still smell the acrid stench of smoke as the fire destroys everything in its path. Or am I smelling the residual smoke clinging to my now ruined-beyond-repair nightgown? I’m not certain. One glance behind me will tell me if I have come far enough, but I cannot look back, nor can I stop my feet from moving.

Bound by the magic of the Promise I made to my sister, I’m doomed to keep moving until I’m beyond the reach of imminent danger. 

I wish I could stop now, though. I know they did not pursue me. Ann diverted the savages away from me, letting me escape. 

As my pace slows, tears that have threatened to spill ever since I watched my father being stabbed to death rain down my face. I try to stem the flow, but the dam has burst, and there’s no stopping it now. My vision is further hampered by the tears blurring it, and my feet finally stop moving. I take shallow, gasping breaths, my chest heaving up and down as sobs wrack my body. In the quiet stillness of the night, they sound too loud. Fearful of attracting unwanted attention, I bite my lips until I draw blood, silencing my sobs. 

The sheer rush of adrenaline that had provided the necessary burst of speed to make my escape from the blazing palace, has now abated. The magic of the Promise Ann had extracted from me has now worn off. 

I lean against the trunk of a tree, allowing myself a moment of rest before moving ahead.

With everything I possess, I want to make my way back to the place where Ann gave herself away to our pursuers. But what good will it do? For now, I have to be content knowing that she escaped. Or at least, I hope she did. 

Cold fingers grip my heart, squeezing it until I find it difficult to breathe as doubts assail my mind. What if she hasn’t escaped? What if they’ve killed her, just as they killed our father?

No. That can’t be. To bolster my belief, I force myself to recall everything that transpired after we emerged from the secret passageway connecting Father’s bedchamber to a spot just beyond the rear wall of our palace. I close my eyes and press my fingers to them as I go over every detail in my head…

We have just made our way out of the secret underground passage and have taken only a few steps in the direction of the forest when we realize we have company. Our pursuers have somehow already found us. How? Do they know about the secret passageway? It can’t be. Nobody knows about it, except the immediate family and the Council. It has to be purely by chance that they have found us. The alternative is too terrible to contemplate.

We run, but they are too close. We aren’t allowed to harm anybody with our magic; however, we can surely defend ourselves. Both Ann and I mutter the incantation under our breath that will construct an impregnable defensive wall between us and our three pursuers–the same wall that is erected around the palace. We don’t pause to think that our pursuers have managed to breach it. The wall forms behind us, transparent, solid, and yet not solid. 

We don’t stop running, and that probably saves our lives.They tear through the wall as if it doesn’t exist. We try several other defensive spells, but nothing is working. It is worrisome, but we don’t have the time to solve that puzzle. 

Having no other option, Ann and I draw on the Dark Magic we are only allowed to use under dire circumstances. Ann particularly has a natural affinity for it. She is more skilled than me in every other form of magic as well. By rights, by seniority of birth, by her superior skills, she should have been the rightful heir. But Altairian succession rules are… unique. 

We hold hands, and I press whatever little Dark Magic I have outwards, merging with that of Ann’s, allowing the night to Cloak us, rendering us invisible to our pursuers. 

The Cloak won’t shroud us forever. We have a quarter of an hour at the most, but they probably don’t know that. They come to a sudden halt inches away from us, looking around them, their silver daggers held at the ready.

‘Show yourselves!’ the guttural shout from one of them tears through the night.

Making as little noise as possible, we slide away from them, inch by inch, eyes wide with terror, until we are out of their striking distance. We can't remain here forever. With each passing minute, the Cloak will fade little by little. There has to be a way out of this mess. 

‘If we move in the direction of the forest while still Cloaked, we stand a chance to outrun them,’ I whisper.

The sound of my voice instantly alerts the assassins even though my words are barely audible to my own ears.

Ann shakes her head. ‘They’re the Cursed Ones. We’ll never outrun them.’

Yes, they’re the Cursed Ones. Their eyes, glowing in the darkness like that of a beast, gives away at least that much about them. My eyes close and my shoulders sag. Is this how it’s going to end? They will kill us, their silver daggers plunging into our hearts over and over again, just as they killed Father. The Cursed Ones are gifted hunters, especially at night.

I take a deep breath and straighten my spine. We can’t give up without a fight.

‘We must at least try to escape. Let’s head for the cover of the trees.’ I see the three assassins turn their heads in our direction. 

‘It will never work.’

Our pursuers take another couple of steps towards us, randomly brandishing their daggers in front of them. The tip of one grazes my thigh, and I bite back a whimper. We move away, putting more distance between them and us. Ann is edging us toward the forest behind the rear wall, despite her earlier comments. She has that determined look on her face she gets every time she is told she can’t do something. 

‘Do you trust me?’ she asks.

‘You know I do.’

‘Will you make a Promise if you trust me with your life?’

I hesitate only briefly. ‘Yes.’

‘We need a diversion. I’m going to draw them away. But I need you to Promise me you’ll not turn back; Promise me you’ll find your way to safety. Promise me you’ll remain quiet, no matter what you hear.’

‘Ann…’

‘There’s no time to lose, Ava. The Cloak might start to fade any minute now.’

I don’t like it. Her words are ominous enough to tell me that she intends to be the sacrificial offering while letting me escape. 

‘Ava?’

‘I will Promise only if you Promise you won’t put yourself in harm’s way. Promise me you will keep yourself safe.’

I thrust my jaw forward as I meet Ann’s exasperated gaze with stubbornness. She frees her hands from mine and presses her fingers to her temples.

‘Hmm… I believe I can make it work. Okay, I Promise I will keep myself safe.’

‘Then I Promise too.’

My heart stops beating for several long seconds when I hear her call out– ‘I’m Princess Avalea Starr. Let my sister go. It’s me you want. I’m the heir-apparent. If you spare my sister, Princess Annea Rae, I’ll give myself up’. 

No! I want to scream, but my tongue is stuck to the roof of my mouth. The Promise binds me to the word I have given.

They run toward Ann’s voice, but Ann drags us farther away, stepping out of their reach yet again. We can’t continue this sick ballet forever. The Cloak thankfully seems to be holding, even though it has certainly been more than a quarter of an hour. Or perhaps it hasn’t, and it is my own fear making it seem as if the time is going faster than it really is.

‘You know the chances of you getting caught increase exponentially the longer you linger around the palace.’

My heart soars at Ann’s words. Yes! Help will be here. We simply have to hold them at bay until the guards arrive. I turn my head to look at the mayhem behind us. The assassins have set fire to the palace. Every spare person is occupied with putting the fire out. It will be hours before they realize we are missing. My shoulders sag in dejection. Nobody is coming to our aid. We are on our own.

Ann’s words seem to have made the assassins think. They pause in their stride and huddle together, apparently discussing how best to tackle this obstacle.

‘Alright. Show yourself, Princess Avalea Starr. We will let your sister go.’

‘Do you Promise?’

They make an impatient noise.

‘Say the words. Do you Promise to let my sister go? Do you promise to let Ann go?’

‘We Promise,’ says one of them.

‘I need to hear all of you say it.’

‘We Promise,’ they say, their words laced with barely concealed anger rather than impatience this time. One doesn’t need to be a Mind Reader to know their words are obviously false. 

But the deed is done. They don’t know it, but Ann has bound them with the Promise.

The Cloak dissolves the minute they say the words. Ann pushes me in the direction of the forest. My feet take over, carrying me away from Ann.

There are shouts and exclamations from behind me as the assassins realize we have tricked them.

‘You’re not Princess Avalea!’

‘She’s escaping! Tor, get her!’

‘I can’t move!’

‘Grab Princess Annea!’

‘She tricked us! I can’t move.’

‘I thought that vile potion had made us immune to magic.’ 

A steady stream of angry curses turns the air blue.

Their words are growing fainter the farther I go. The last thing I think I heard was–

‘Where did she go? She was right here!’ More curses. 

Slowly, I open my eyes. The last bit of conversation I heard makes me think Ann Cloaked herself again. The clever way in which she worded the Promise ensured they could harm neither of us. They weren't able to caputre her even if they wanted to. 

Relief makes my legs go weak as I collapse to the ground; but soon, doubt returns, twisting my stomach, threatening to make me sick. Our magic had been useless against them. How can I be certain that the Promise bound them to their word? What if they broke free of it and managed to capture her?

It seemed to have worked, seeing how they could not pursue me, but can I be absolutely certain that Ann has escaped? I can’t, but I have to believe it, for the sake of my sanity.

I have to reach Uncle Horace. I will find her there. And once I do, we will bring Father’s murderers to justice. 

I push myself to my feet and look around me, hoping to find some sort of shelter for the night. There is a dilapidated hut up ahead. By the looks of it, it seems abandoned. 

When I make it to the hut without incident, my relief knows no bounds. I had almost expected somebody to be lying in wait there. The thatched roof of the hut needs repair. One wall has partially collapsed. The mud floor is strewn with bird droppings. Yet, in one corner, there is a pallet made of hay. In my exhausted state, I don’t stop to wonder who made it. I head for it and make myself as comfortable as I can. 

Altairain nights are really cold, but with everything that transpired, with the effort I put into escaping and in using magic I’m not accustomed to using, I’m perspiring heavily. My skin feels hot, and the cold air feels like a balm. I turn on my side and close my eyes. Sleep steals over my senses, and I surrender to the blessed escape. 

It isn’t much of an escape, however, as my slumber is peppered with nightmares of Father being killed, Ann being captured and tortured; one garish image merging into another until I’m forced to open my eyes.

As I return to a state of wakeful awareness, my heart rate spikes up when I sense a presence of another being in the hut. Slowly, hesitantly, I turn to face whoever is in the room. 

I’m staring into the glowing eyes of a Cursed One.

They have found me.

Related chapters

Latest chapter

DMCA.com Protection Status