《Blood's Black Frequency》C5 - Shattered Mind and Splintered Stone
Advertisement
Po’ke turned and roared at the terrified boys he had dragged along to this strange lighthouse in the dead of night. “Get those looks off your faces and help me with this thing!” He scrambled behind the block of stone which Grandfather had ripped out of the floor, putting his little wooden box carefully onto the ground and then putting his shoulder into the cubic slab.
The boys quickly understood what he intended, and rushed to add their weights to the block. The three of them heaved with all their might. Their eyes bulging and their hot breath steamed into the air as they strove to shift the stone back into its original position, plugging the secret hole in the lighthouse’s ground floor.
Yet, all their strength combined could not move the stone a single inch. Though Grandfather had heaved it up by himself with enough force to crack stone as he slammed it down again, the strongest man Charlotte had ever seen and two more young men besides could not move it in the slightest.
At that moment, Charlotte truly believed everything the chemists had told her about the mutant transformation.
She clutched her hands to her head, racking her brain in search of anything Grandfather might have told her about fighting ghouls and vampires throughout her childhood.
Charlotte had to dig deep into her memories. Grandfather had never liked to discuss the details of fighting monsters. He had always discouraged Charlotte from the idea that she might become a Memory someday herself, and always changed the subject if Charlotte prodded him to extrapolate on some story about her mother that went further than simply how she had saved some family from a fate worse than death.
Well, everyone knew vampires were weak to sunlight. That had to go for ghouls and mutants too, right? They were born from vampires, after all.
But now it was the middle of the night. It was the night of the full moon, no less. The night when vampires were supposed to be the strongest.
Fire. Ghouls hated fire. It was one of the harshest weapons against their regeneration. Grandfather had at least told her that much, once upon a time.
Even if the man himself was not exactly a ghoul, that was the only weakness Charlotte could latch onto.
“We need to throw fire down there,” she said. “I think fire will keep him away. For the moment. Maybe that can buy us time.”
Ke’a glanced at Charlotte and nodded. “You have firewood?”
“No, not firewood. Oil.” Charlotte raced to the pallet beside their fireplace, where blocks of processed seal oil lay in their cloth wrappings. She called for help, and Ke’a helped her drag the heavy pallet to the edge of the hole. Dozens of the greasy blocks lay on the pallet, enough to keep the lighthouse warm for a week. As it happened, the fireplace on the far wall was dead by now, though the coals had been far from dead when Charlotte had left to seek help. Grandfather must have scattered the coals after escaping from his bonds.
Advertisement
The men stopped shoving the stone and moved around to assist the women. The boys had looks of utter terror on their faces and had long since dropped their clubs. Charlotte snapped at them to be helpful and unwrap the oil blocks, so with trembling fingers they tore strips from the packaging and followed Charlotte in dropping the rancid, oily cloth into the hole between them.
Po’ke quickly caught on and, having much better control of himself than the boys, split the dense blocks between his fingers and crumbled the constituent fuel into tooth-sized chunks. The work smeared his hands with black-brown grease but aerated the fuel well as it fell down in trickles like soil shoveled into an empty grave.
No additional noise came from below this entire time. That scared Charlotte more than anything. It was like seeing a deadly spider in your room before it darted away into a corner and you lost track of it. You might be able to tolerate it if it sat right on the wall where you could see it, and even if it never bit you you would prefer to have never known it existed.
But once you knew it hid from you, that it had the upper hand and could kill you simply by sinking its tiny teeth into your heel, that was almost too much to bear.
If he were mutating into a creature anything like the ghouls he had described to her, Charlotte bet that Grandfather’s teeth were a bit larger than a spider’s by now. She looked again at the deep claw-marks on the stone block which lay, unmovable, beside them. They were nothing like the pathetic scrapes which Grandfather had visited upon her sleeves before she tied him up.
When the five of them had nearly broken down every one of the dozens of fuel blocks, Ke’a knotted up one of the remaining cloth wrappers, and set it on the edge of the hole. “Stand back or you’ll go up yourself,” she warned, then ignited her lighter, set it on the ground, and pushed it with her toe until its steady flame touched the cloth’s frayed edge.
She flinched as the whole mass of fabric burst into flame at once and reflexively kicked both it and her lighter into the hole.
Less than two silent heartbeats passed before, following a heavy pulse of air pressure, roiling orange–white lights burst from far below, revealing a drop of at least 50 feet. Hellish, black smoke burped up from below, having no outlet except the ersatz chimney over which Charlotte and her allies stood.
Charlotte stumbled away, coughing and retching, as the vile cloud billowed around her. She heard the sounds of the others reacting similarly, and one of the boys was actually vomiting close by as he could not endure the rancid stench of processed blubber.
And then Charlotte heard the screaming. The screaming of a man blind with pain, choked with rage, burning with hatred as well as with fire. Even over the roar of the newborn flames, Grandfather’s screaming came to her loud and clear.
Advertisement
Then the screams were much louder, much closer!
In an instant the flames rose above the level of the floor—
No. No, no. Charlotte had fallen to her back in confusion and was now trying to reorient herself. She was not prepared to see the looming, humanoid form engulfed in flames which clambered its way up the edge of the hole. She scrambled backward, scraping her bare hands on shattered pottery and debris, not stopping until her head collided with the wall.
The mutant did not seem to be looking directly at her. Its flesh pulsed underneath the sheet of flame, seeming to grow and shrink in mass with breath-like regularity. Bulbs of tumorous flesh burst open in the flames and then dissolved, and the creature twitched and convulsed as it moved its limbs in a jerky, staggering march toward the lighthouse’s open door. Now and again the bones of its ribs, skull, and limbs became visible, exposed by the licking fire, before muscles reformed and allowed the mutant to keep walking.
Charlotte wasn’t the only one to notice. She heard Ke’a yell at her husband to stop, and then a moment later Po’ke himself tore past Charlotte, a club in one hand and the small wooden box in the other.
Just as the mutant who had been Grandfather passed through the door, Po’ke barreled into him. Their screaming and the thumping, scraping noise of a scuffle clashed with the still-heavy thunder of fire from down below, but the two men were hidden from Charlotte’s sight through the doorway, and she couldn’t make out a single detail of the fight.
Charlotte scrambled to her feet and staggered after the pair as best as she could. This was insanity. This was a nightmare. Smoke and noise and heat assaulted Charlotte from every angle. Her brain fogged and her lungs burned. She pulled the fabric of her nightshirt up from under her coat and over her nose in an attempt to filter out some of the smoke, and though it still stung her eyes, she could finally move without retching.
Charlotte moved toward the door with unsteady but decisive steps. She had to see what was happening. She had come this far and needed to see it all through.
She emerged. To her horror she realized that, as Po’ke and Grandfather thrashed in a pile on the sand, the flames on the mutant’s flesh were quickly extinguishing. Thankfully, they likewise suppressed the flames catching in Po’ke’s furs, but as the fire died out from Grandfather’s body, so did their greatest weapon and perhaps their only chance at survival.
Little muscle remained on the mutant’s bones, but considering the evidence of his previous, monstrous strength, and the rate at which his muscle was regenerating, it was clear that in a very short time Grandfather would be strong enough again to move a stone block so tremendous that three men could not budge it together.
He would be strong enough to rip even the mighty Father Po’ke in half.
“The relic!” Po’ke roared. “Challa!”
His words turned to anguished screaming as Grandfather put a bony claw like an eagle’s beak into Po’ke eye socket and tore through it into the flesh of his cheek.
The wooden box! There must be a relic in it! The box lay on the ground mere steps away, between the doorway and the brawl which turned every moment more away from Po’ke’s favor, but Charlotte was frozen by fear. She could not get close. Yes, relics killed vampires. This one could save Po’ke. But if she got close, Grandfather would kill her just as he was killing…
Po’ke screamed again. Grandfather pulled back his arm, flecks of blood hurtling from the red–drenched forelimb.
“You’ve always thought you’re better than me!” He said in a wet, gristly wail. “The man without a leg! He can’t take care of himself, can’t be of value to anyone, can he? ‘I’ll take care of you, old man, and take care of your granddaughter, because you sure as hell can’t!’”
His arm came down again and Po’ke, somehow retaining focus despite his ghastly injuries, caught it in both his mighty hands.
Though it seemed that the muscles of Po’ke’s bulging forearms were far more powerful than Grandfather’s thin, stringy claws, Grandfather grinned with a mouth full of teeth so long and inhuman they stabbed through his own cheeks in places, as though someone had stuck an angler fish’s jaw into a human skull. He drooled as he pressed his arm inexorably downward, seeming to move so slowly not because Po’ke offered any real resistance, but because he enjoyed the fear and anguish he must be reading in Po’ke’s face.
Ke’a yelled something from within the lighthouse, but Charlotte could not make it out. She was only focused on the scene before her. In a moment, Po’ke would die.
He still had a family. Charlotte had none left at all.
Earlier had been the time for crying. That had been the time for mourning.
But now she would honor Grandfather’s memory by following what he had taught her. To be a Memory was to remember those who came before, to remember that others would come after, to choose to be human in a world full of monsters.
Catching her breath, steeling her quaking heart, Charlotte dashed for the wooden box on the ground.
Grandfather did not look up.
Charlotte gripped the box and ripped its top off to find a ring of silver wire with a delicate barb protruding from the outside.
Hoping that she did not make a mistake, Charlotte slipped on the ring, took the single step which separated her from Grandfather, and swung toward him.
Effortlessly, as if by animal reflex, Grandfather’s other arm, the one he was not using to torment Po’ke, came up to ward away Charlotte’s feeble attack. He clutched her wrist and snapped the bones of her forearm as a child might break a blade of grass.
The needle of the ring pierced his flesh, and a feeling like ice filled Charlotte’s body as both she and Grandfather began to scream.
Advertisement
- In Serial23 Chapters
Void Merchant
On a cold rainy night, Noah valentine lay down on the hard asphalt, grasping the wound at his side, wishing for the pain to end. But this wasn't the end of his story. Suddenly, the raindrops seemed to freeze in mid air, as if time had stopped. A voice filled Noah's mind and soon his body was engulfed in a bright light. When the light cleared Noah found himself in a world between worlds. The weird and wonderful inhabitants of this realm called it the Void. Millions of universes all connected to this one place, an infinite variety of technology, magic, and other wonderful things at the tips of his fingers. With the help the people he met, Noah Valentine began trading unique alien technology with the people of Earth, influencing society, economies and politics on a massive scale. But there are many exotic worlds connected to the void, and dangers lurking in the shadows, what troubles will Noah find along the way?
8 255 - In Serial39 Chapters
Haven in a Dangerous World (Old)
Devin McMullen. Female. 18. Single dad. Dead mom. Good in fights and little else. No friends. Or, at least, that's what she's always been. Now, she's not sure exactly what she is. She's never been one for reading fiction, or anything for that matter, but this feels like something straight out of a fantasy. Her newly acquired instincts, however, scream dungeon core. Whatever that is. Unlike most dungeon cores, though, she's missing something very important. A dungeon. Stuck out in the open, above ground where she's definitely not supposed to be, with not a cave in sight, or any other land form besides miles and miles of ice and snow, Devin's not sure if she can survive. Update: Big caveate, though, just so you know. Started with this one idea and ran with it as far as I could. Characters and plot suffer from it, but I'm proud that I wrote as much as I did. I will rewrite this at some point and make it so it actually has plot. Check out my wordpress © [koallary] and [Haven in a Dangerous World], [2017]. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this site’s author and/or owner is strictly prohibited. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to [koallary] and [Haven in a Dangerous World] with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.
8 147 - In Serial17 Chapters
Awakening in Ruins
The kingdom of Kemnar had been at peace for more than a century. But now it is overrun by an undead army. Almost the entire country lies in ruins. Even the royal castle has fallen. But now something awakens in a secret room inside the royal castles laboratory. And it is something the world has never seen, for it was created by a mage and is the first of its kind. This story follows an artificially created being as it fights the undead while trying to find out what it is and for what purpose it was created. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This is my first time writing, so I welcome any critisism.
8 216 - In Serial30 Chapters
All I Wanted {Book 1}
Meet Abigail Jenkins. She's sixteen. Smart, Funny, Pretty, And a good-girl. But, she's never had a boyfriend. Of course, if she hadn’t given her heart to her brother’s best friend, she might not be in this predicament. Opportunities for love long lasting had come and gone, due to her tunnel vision on the subject. At twelve years of age she’d decided that Nick Walker was the one. And that childish dream certainly had rooted deep and flourished with time.
8 215 - In Serial28 Chapters
florence - enola holmes
𝓷𝓸𝔀, 𝔀𝓱𝓮𝓻𝓮 𝓽𝓸 𝓫𝓮𝓰𝓲𝓷?completed!viscount tewkesbury fanfic !florence and enola holmes are twin sisters, who couldn't imagine life without eachother. when their beloved mother goes missing, florence and enola set out on an adventure to find her and meet a boy by the name of viscount tewkesbury along the way. what happens when florence falls head over boots for this boy? lowercase intended !
8 88 - In Serial13 Chapters
Mori X Reader
Your parents move you from Japan's country side to Tokyo, the busiest city in Japan because they want her to train with a world famous Karate and Kendo trainer. This means new school, living alone, and new friends. Her new school happens to be Ouran Academy, where she meets one of her friends from the dojo. (This story is based off my other book of preferences and imagines so if it seems familiar that's why)
8 183

