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Monday, November 12, 2012

Nightwolf Prologue


Prologue
The silver disc that was the crescent moon silently climbed its way into the night sky as a whispering breeze beckoned through the mix of pines and oaks in the autumn valley.  The breeze soon grew to a solid wind and the entity began to carry with it the dusting of leaves that had collected on the soggy forest floor.  The wind swam through the trees as the decaying leaves smacked the sides of the trunks and though they did their best, the forest eventually filtered out the leaves as the lonesome wind slowly began to die out.
A herd of ash-colored clouds began to huddle into the star-scattered sky as the evening wore on, and the moon eventually became but a blot of light, dimmed and blurred yet surprisingly out of place in the otherwise darkened valley.  Far below the ominous heavens, a dirt path that had collected pockets of mud cut a distinct path through the dampened grasses and bushes that littered the forest debris.  Somewhere along the path, headed gradually downhill was a pair of young boys not much older than ten years of age.  One was slightly taller than the other, yet both were garbed in dirtied black and brown cloaks that allowed them to blend in to the night.
Had it not been for the lantern that the taller boy carried, the two would have been completely invisible.  Holstered upon a long, frail pole rested a small, rectangular box that glowed yellow and orange.  With each step, the Victorian-style lantern swung back and forth as the miniature flame within flickered and danced wildly.  Despite the eerie silence of the night, the boys still couldn’t hear the flame as it silently screamed and desperately tried to escape from its cage.
“How much further is it?” the younger boy asked as a cloud of fog emanated from his thin mouth as he spoke.
“Not much,” the taller boy answered while he sniffed heavily and withdrew a wet droplet that hung at the edge of his nostril back up into his sinus, “Maybe a mile.”
“It’s been dark for a while.  You know we shouldn’t be in the forest after dark,” the younger boy said.
“What, are you afraid of the boogieman?” the taller boy teased, poking the other boy’s ribs before laughing profusely.
“Stop it, Nick, that isn’t funny” the shorter boy said sternly as his knees began to shake and tremor.
“Don’t tell me that you actually believe in any of that, Sam,” Nick replied, “Grown-ups only tell us those things to scare us and make sure we eat our vegetables and do our homework.  None of it is actually real.”
“But my mom told me that a few years ago that a boy went missing near these woods,” Sam refuted, lowering the hood on his cloak slightly.
“He probably went off the trail or something,” Nick replied, “Just make sure you don’t- fall off!”
With that, the taller boy shoved the unsuspecting shorter boy off the trail and into a patch of wet, dying bushes whose countless, tiny arms wrapped around and clung to the boy.
Squirming and thrashing about violently, Sam tore his clothing on the bushes as he screamed and frantically tried to free himself from the lifeless grasp.
“Nick! Help!!” he howled.
Nick did nothing initially but cackle with laughter, barely holding onto the lantern at times as he did.
Suddenly, Nick saw a flash of red in the darkness where Sam struggled.  His eyes widened and he immediately set the lantern down, nearly breaking its cage.
“Sam, calm down,” Nick told him as he tried setting his friend free from the thorns, “Stop moving!  It’s just a bush!”
With Nick’s help, Sam slowly began to calm down and be set free from the plant’s claws.  As his breathing slowed, Sam rose to his feet and began brushing himself off.  Nick noticed the tears in Sam’s clothing where the thorns had shredded his cloaks and skin underneath.  Sam struggled to catch his breath in-between uncontrollable sobbing while Nick helped dry his tears with his dirtied fingers.
“It’s okay Sam, you’re okay,” Nick told him as he picked up the lantern once more and noticed a slight crack in one of the glass panes, “I know you were scared, but it wasn’t anything.”
“Why would you do that?” Sam asked, wiping his eyes dry and finding his ability to speak clearly once more.
Nick pondered that question for a moment, staring out into space and getting lost in his thoughts.
“Why did I do that?” he thought to himself, “Was it because I’m bigger?  Was it because I simply could?”
“I don’t know,” Nick finally answered solemnly.
“I was really scared, Nick,” Sam groaned as the two continued on their way once more.
“There’s nothing dangerous out here though,” Nick replied, “Nothing will hurt us.”
With that, another wind suddenly pushed its way into the valley and through the thick trees until it swept around the two boys.  The massive gale curled around their cloaks and tugged at their legs.  The winds that blew over the valley also pushed out the herds of blackened clouds overhead, bringing the full moon into focus once more.  The winds brought with it a haunting howl that swam through the trees with ease.  The haunting cry was immense and deep, piercing the heavy cloaks of the boys and sending a lightning bolt of fear into the core of the boys.  They froze in terror as the roar rose and fell like an alarm and as the blood rushed from their veins.  Their breathing halted as the cold wind filled their lungs, and their skin quickly grew cold.  With the last of the dying breeze, the colossal howl ceased as well, yet an unsettling silence surrounded the duo.
“Run,” Nick whispered, staring off into the darkness uphill where he sensed that the danger originated.
Sam suddenly took off, sprinting down the dirt path, further downhill into the shadow yet Nick remained for a moment, holding the lantern with a shaky hand.  Nick stood with his knees ready to buckle as he peered into the distant darkness between the trees.  He focused his attention to his ears which perked up slightly as he heard a distant rustling.
The blood dropped from his face and a flash of white came over him as the rustling in the darkness swiftly grew closer and closer.  His legs and arms quivered while his impending doom ran closer towards him.  The sounds of rustling rose to a fast-paced galloping mixed with a tearing apart of the bushes and small trees until they suddenly stopped right before they came to Nick.  There, in the midst of the fear and darkness that Nick stood before were a pair of orange eyes that glowed with a furious, bewitching glare that burned away at Nick’s mind.  As his thoughts exited his mind, the pair of orange gems narrowed as a frightening growl emanated from the darkness.  The nearly invisible beast blew a thick smoke from its lungs as it stared at the young boy who could do nothing but stare back.  Slowly, the beast stepped forward from the darkness to reveal a gargantuan wolf with a slight humanoid physique.  Though it stood on two legs, the beast seemed to also use it’s two front arms topped with charcoal claws as support.  It’s snout was curled and it’s dark nostrils were flared.  As the beast stepped closer and closer towards Nick out of the darkness, it revealed more of it’s dark-grey coat, littered with dirt and cuts.
Nick’s shallow breathing had come to a full stop as the demon had come out of the brush and onto the trail, it’s growling becoming more ferocious with each step.  Nick stepped back as the monster suddenly raised one of its claws to him.  He took a second step back and the colossal wolf roared as it swiped at the young boy.  The claws tore at his sleeve, ripping cloth and flesh alike and sending the young boy spinning and flying to the ground.  As the boy fell, he lost grip of the lantern which shattered upon impact with the ground.
The candle within the lantern had finally escaped its cage and burst into a miniature inferno before swiftly dying.  As the only light in the forest had died, only the bright, full moon remained overhead, providing just enough light for Nick to see that the crimson gushing from his arm had turned black.  Staring up at the beast that had come over him, the boy could see only the silver outline of the demon’s fur, vaguely illuminated from the moonlight and the pair of gems that rested in the beast’s eyes and that had grown bright and piercing once more.
The boy’s breathing halted once more as he clutched his wounded arm.  With mouth agape in sheer terror, the boy tightly closed his eyes.
“It’s only a dream,” he told himself as he felt the thick arms of the brute grab him, “It’s only a dream.”
Just above the lacerations on his arm, Nick felt a fire tear into his shoulder as the teeth sunk through his skin and into his flesh and bone.  Screaming in agony, the boy had become overwhelmed and his senses were lost.  His pain and terror seeped away and his mind became lost to the darkness of his dreams.