《The Solstice Wars》Three
Advertisement
All the world was smeared over with a viscous haze, and all she could sense as she struggled out of three days’ sleep was pain. It pulsed in time with her heartbeat, a long throb from somewhere low on her body. For a single moment that stuttered and dragged, she didn’t remember where the pain came from, and then she did -- her ankle.
It told her two things: that she wasn’t dead, and that someone must have healed her, at least somewhat.
She mulled over these bits of information, rolling them around and poking and prodding them, looking for holes. The fact that she had lived was absolutely certain. Everything ached way too much for her to have died, and she smelled lavender. Nobody had ever told her that being dead had a smell.
As for the healing, she didn’t feel anything wet where the hounds had caught her. An image of a dog-shaped shadow flickered across the stage of her eyelids, growling, springing, vanishing. Though she struggled with her half-sleeping brain, she could not determine how long it’d been since the attack. But from the dryness of the wound, and the feeling of something soft packed in around it, she estimated perhaps a day.
Wakefulness fell into place one piece at a time. That soft surface was everywhere, filling the space around her body like clouds. From it, the floral scent drifted. There was light coming from somewhere beside her, not enough to sting her closed eyes, but enough that they fluttered open to find its source.
The window to her left had its slitted blinds at an angle to let the sun shine through. It cast slats of pale yellow across the blankets draped over her form, making them looked ribbed in brightness and shadow. The more she allowed her vision to adjust, the more outlines, then shapes, then objects materialized: bed posts, bookshelves, curtains, chairs. There was one by the bed, and another by the desk tucked into the far left corner, between herself and the window.
She prepared for another wave of pain and propped herself up on bent elbows to look in the opposite direction. In a snap of a second, she wished she hadn’t.
From the ceiling to the floor stretched a flag. That flag. A sapphire backdrop, a red x, a white x, a great scarlet cross slashed across the foreground. She cringed, tasting bitterness and sickly breath. How had she landed in England? Why had that been the first place to which her thoughts had gone when she’d grasped the portal? Gods, had that memory dredged up from the nebulous swamps beneath every bit of rationality she’d ever scraped together? If this really was England, then whether it was chance or the fate goddess Morrigan toying with her, she couldn’t think about it.
Advertisement
So, she steeled herself against it, giving the thing a mental smack into the sludge of other Things She Could Not Think About, and was done with it. Vast scores of countries bore that mark. Wherever she’d landed, all she had to do was recover, leave, and find some place to adequately blend in.
If the hunters and their hounds were a threat, then the people from whom they hid were lethal.
There came a creak from outside the room. The door handle turned. Her heart slammed against her chest, fear searing away dullness.
She wasn’t sure that she could even walk, but she was sure that she wouldn’t lie down and surrender. Her hands clenched into fists, lacking any weapon but knuckles and curses.
They fell slack when the door opened.
He was sunlight, the young man who stepped inside -- shoulder-length honey hair, skin warm and fair, as he laid upon her a heather gaze, grey-green as the sea in autumn. His clothing was plain, but a peaceful sort of plain, pale denim and a cable-knit sweater that spilled down to his thighs, and bunched at his wrists, letting his fingers emerge clasping a white box between them. It was plastic, hooked closed, and large enough to contain perhaps a book. But the box was nowhere near as enthralling as his expression.
He hadn’t expected her to be awake, had he?
The two were locked at a standstill. It was like what people said of empaths and psychics: they didn’t look at you. They looked into you.
Instead of what she was sure he’d say -- Who are you? What are you? What happened? -- he asked only one question.
“Do you feel alright?”
His voice held none of the lilt she heard in Belfast or Dublin or home, only a velveteen calm, sweets for the ears. Her precarious hope toppled. Never had she heard a voice more undeniably English.
Her own would not come. The air began coursing with electricity, as though this one room in this one home in this one inescapable country was poised on the edge of a lightning strike to end all lightning strikes. She remembered how it’d felt when Soiléireacht had broken. Right before the break, the air was just like this. And she was going to feel it again unless she answered. Why that was so certain, she couldn’t say.
“Yes,” she managed at last. The single word rasped, hoarse in her throat.
His stare faltered from hers, and his stance shifted, losing the tension that her unexpected consciousness had brought.
“How... how did you get hurt?”
“How did you know what to do?”
Advertisement
“I know what you are.” And, before she had the chance to take fright or offense at his blithely casual tone, he added, “I’m not going to tell anybody.”
For the second time in as many minutes, there was nothing that she could say.
In her silence, he took a step forward, rubbing the corner of the box with his thumbs like a worry stone. Another charge of energy pulsed through the air, from him to her.
“Well,” he said, and stood still, no more than another foot nearer. “I was going to change the dressing, but... you can do it yourself, I suppose.”
It was less of a statement and more of a question, and within it, buried deep, was fear that she’d not noticed moments earlier.
That’s right. You should be afraid.
A trace of... something... flickered through her, though she’d not said anything to intimidate him. It couldn’t be guilt. There was no time for that. She willed it away with a raised brow and a clever line -- or so she intended.
“You really do know what I am, then.”
“Yes, I...”
“Give me no more favors, then. And give me the box.”
He held it out at arm’s length and balanced it in his hands, as if offering a priceless gem on a cushion. Sparks leapt between their fingertips, invisible, when she took it.
“Might I at least ask again what happened?”
As she’d suspected, when she lifted the hooks and flipped the lid, the box was stuffed full of the supplies to clean and dress her wound -- so white, so sterile. She leafed through bandages in individual wrapping, and packets of disinfectant wipes, and vials covered in paper, which were printed with so much medical jargon that she couldn’t make heads nor tails of it.
Under the latter, she uncovered a flat pebble.
“The hounds did it,” she said, and she turned the pebble over. Three etched spirals stared back at her. That was at least a sign that she’d not been captured by some amateur researcher.
“The Wild Hunt?”
“Surprised?”
“Well,” he repeats, in the sort of lost, awkward tone used only for surprises. “I wasn’t aware they still...”
“Exist?”
“I guess so.”
“A lot of things still exist.”
His eyes flicked back to hers, surely searching for an explanation. She gave none, not to be standoffish, but because she was bracing for what she would see under the gauze around her ankle.
“Go away, now,” she prompted, the box set upon her lap.
He bowed his head, retreated, and nudged the door closed behind him. That electric crackling left the air, fizzling to nothing and leaving her body heavy as iron. She exhaled exhaustion, pushed the blankets away, and gingerly peeled back the first strip of gauze. Round and round her hand pulled it, like a snake, until it lay piled on the bed sheets, the inner layers red-brown with congealed blood.
Her stomach clenched. Ice raced down her spine. The skin was raw, red, sliced into oblivion by teeth the likes of which she should not have survived. But what made her mind stammer, unable to rationalize the sight, was how the slices lay flat, edged in crimson and glistening with an oily sheen. It was almost as though they’d been glued. While she hardly dared, she brought her leg closer to her face, grasping by the knee, and took a breath. The odor brimmed with the same pungent sterility of the box; whatever the oil was, it had done just as much as the triskele rune to stop her blood loss.
“Do it myself,” she grumbled, squinting at the type stamped across a disinfectant packet. It did not tell her whether to use the wipe first, or to open the vials, which she presumed held oil. “Real useful.”
She could not have known that he had stayed just outside the door, perched on one of the few areas of hallway floor that did not creak, but she did know that if she didn’t hurry, he’d return. So, she shrugged, sighed, and tore open the packet. At first, she recoiled from the cold, damp square inside and the waft of alcohol smell -- it burned her nose, making her sneeze, which sent yet another lance of pain through her aching body.
But what was she if she couldn’t handle this? Nothing. She dabbed every inch of the wound, stifling a gasp, and with her other hand, wiped her eyes dry when they began to water. If she’d survived the hounds, then she could do this without giving in to weakness.
With each oil trail she trickled onto the new roll of gauze, and each loop around her ankle, she reminded herself of that.
To repay her debt to the young man, she’d refrain from harming him. It was the best he could ask for, really, bringing her into his home.
Tomorrow, she decided. Tomorrow, she’d disappear, keeping one of this world’s precious few kind souls safely in the dark.
Advertisement
- In Serial13 Chapters
The Ginsu Mage
Currently in queue: Episode 13 in progress. Set in the Aurora: Apocalypse universe.Updated every Friday. If it's not updating, I'm working on my other fictions.If nothing's updating, I ran out of whiskey. Be patient. The Gunsu Mage is a hot mess of garbage that should not be taken seriously by anyone. It’s a vaguely-GameLit spoof of Isekai wa Smartphone to Tomoni (In Another World With My Smartphone) where the MC ends up in another world and fused with his kitchen applicances, mashed up with fantasy western elements. Dungeons & Dragons meets the Wild West in an alternate high-fantasy timeline. Guns & Goblins. Cowboys & Wizards. Locomotives & Dwarves. Don’t expect great writing, accurate numbers, or common sense. Hell, don’t expect anything — just relax and let it happen.
8 220 - In Serial25 Chapters
My Collection of Riddle
Join my Discord group: https://discord.gg/xhZjTrWryW Who doesn't love riddles?Who hates it when you can't solve it? I challenge you to give your alter ego specialized in intelligence a shot to solve this a-not-so-hard-i-think-mind-tricking-question with everything of yours to unleash. If you don't know that answer... don't worry I can tell you. Just go to the last chapter..
8 205 - In Serial18 Chapters
Final Realms - New World
Earth wasn't the same as the way it was when the Creator of Life decided to bring forth a new cycle of life, cease gods, humans, and demons from its existence. Thus, a NEW WORLD arises after gods and demons have merged into human reality. Twenty years after the catastrophe, neo-human was born. A superhuman who rivaled a godly strength and acclaimed themselves as the only surviving species in this rebooted world. The daughter of both gods and demons, Cynthia was born simultaneously. Her parents left her in this newborn society among with minority of other gods who seclude themselves from neo-human sight. Her power prevailed when her age turned eighteen. A power that could seize everything under her grasp as her ability was destined to become the crowned head of neo-humans and demons.
8 210 - In Serial19 Chapters
Missteps - Book Two
Adventure. Coin. Danger. Treasure. Ready to truly start their adventuring careers, the seven members of M.A. traverse more of their world. As they navigate the dangers inherent of the unknown, they're also besieged by the dangers within. Kerri's mark remains an ever-present threat, Lia's memories bring up truths she'd never experienced, Iados still can't visit the ocean for fear of being dragged away, and Jun is still out to prove himelf to his god. Who knows where fate will lead them, or what challenges will be put in their way. Book Two of this fantasy campaign-style tale has our heroes dive further into a world inspired by classic roleplaying adventures, and the unpredictabily of dice. Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/misstepsstory Discord: https://discord.gg/fQECFhBjV7 Twitter: https://twitter.com/MisstepsStory Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/misstepsstory Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/misstepsstory/
8 141 - In Serial326 Chapters
Dying for a Cure
Just when Vince was on the crux of starting his life, he found out it was going to end. Cancer. Inoperable. Less than a year to live. Then he's summoned to the magical world of Earris and thrown directly into battle. He quickly learns that everyone in this world has a Skill, even him. Though his appears not to be useful... Once he figures things out, he sets his mind to two goals: curing his cancer, and getting home. But will anything in this world really be that easy? NEW CHAPTERS MONDAY - SATURDAY 8:30AM, US CST (1:30pm GMT)
8 84 - In Serial13 Chapters
Aliens! Tech! War! OH YES!!
Jacob Strickwing 25 medical discharged from the U.S. Army after the 300 Day chinesse war in 2027 stops a group of aliens from abducting some college coeds before they all get abducted from a different aliean speicies.
8 185

