Coal Scuttle

The coal scuttle looks wonderfully innocent next to the fireplace where it belongs. No one could ever guess how many lives it has ended by now.

An antique beauty. The kind of craftsmanship no one has the time for these days.

It cost a lot when it was made. Even more so today, were it ever sold.

But it won’t be.

That coal scuttle can only ever be inherited with the house. It has no intentions of ever ending up someplace else.

It works for its owners. Helps them by adding more coals to the fire. Keeps the house forever pleasantly warm.

But it does demand to be paid every now and then.

Ages ago, when it was first created, it took the lives of several children of the house. Whacked them in the head when they least expected. 

But that made its owners angry. So it whacked them dead as well, and waited for the house to be inherited by someone else.

Its second owner made a deal with it. Other people’s children would be brought in from time to time. “Street children scurrying to be scuttled for a dime!” the second owner called it. Laughed at his own plan. Rather unhinged. But kept their word.

Children came.

The scuttle killed them.

Life went on.

Street kids have been replaced by “The homeless, scurrying to be scuttled for a lot more than a dime.” Still, life goes on. 

There were talks of modernising the house at some point. Taking it from coals to gas, and later electric heating.

Perhaps you may guess what happened to the people of the gas company, and to the electricians when they came to try to make the changes.

Coal is a beautiful thing. It makes such a beautiful fire. 

The scuttle keeps the fire fed.

The fire eats all evidence of the scuttle’s deeds.

It looks so innocent. Next to the fireplace. Where it belongs.

Dog Groomer

Making dogs look their absolute best has been his passion for decades. There is little room in his life for anything else.

No romance.

No time for it. Or for any other trivialities, for that matter.

Just work. Vision. Focus. Crystal clear.

He had started with one salon. Grown it into a chain. Nationwide.

He began with nothing but a loan. Other people’s money. Paid it back with interest, and grew rich as well.

Not that he cares for the money, really. That is just a side product of the work. Irrelevant. Except as a tool that lets him do what he wants with dogs.

He loves dogs!

Loves that he can make them look like anything.

Loves that they love him too. All of them. Without conditions.

Even if he botched a cut, as had happened a few times in the very beginning, when he was only practicing, not getting paid, the dogs still loved him!

Owners might be a different matter.

That is why soon after he started he hired someone else to deal with the humans. So he himself can stick with what he does best.

The dog he trimmed today to look like a fabulous red dragon was a testament to his skill. Proof that he is right to do what he does.

To live his life as he does.

Friendless.

Loverless.

Just working…

It’s night. He’s awake, and at his workplace. Looking at the many photos of his clients on the walls.

Dogs. Not people.

He was supposed to be here all alone.

The crashing of a box of products to the floor alerts him to the presence of someone else.

“Who is there?! Show yourself!”

A man steps into view.

A man… with a gun. Pointed straight at him.

“… Who are you?” he asks the man with a gun.

“… You don’t even know me! Do you?! You don’t! I was your favorite cousin growing up, and now you’re rich and famous, you don’t even recognize my face!!”

“Cousin? What cousin??” Genuine confusion. No recollection of any favorite cousin at all…

“… Seriously?! You don’t even remember me?! When I got you your first ever dog to trim!!”

What the hell..?

“Well, I will show you! I will show everyone when I kill you!”

Someone rushes from the shadows. Grapples with the man who holds the gun. They fall and roll on the floor.

Shots go off into the air. Thankfully not hitting him.

His defender is grazed by a bullet before he manages to knock unconscious the would-be murderer, the so-called favorite cousin.

He stares at his savior catching his breath on the floor. The man who handles his human customers. Has for years and years.

Now saved his life.

“Thank you,” he says to this saving angel once he gets up from off the floor. “How did you happen to be here this time of night?”

“I’m always here when you are. Didn’t you know?”

“No… I did not.”

“Well… I do try not to disturb you. Unlike this guy… Who do you think he is?”

“I have no idea.”

Dogs are never this much trouble.

He turns back to looking at the photos of his canine clients. Thinks of ways to outdo his previous work.

His savior calls the cops. Deals with the practicalities, as he always does.

Hopelessly in love with his employer.

Poodles

He was a cliché, and he knew it. A ugly rich old man, who divorced his wife for a beautiful young secretary. Paid through the nose for the privilege of banging a chick much younger than his own children. Married her, and made his children call her “Mother”.

They only did so because they knew he could, and would, disown them for any signs of disobedience. As he had done with his second son. Disowned the ungrateful pup for daring to choose a profession that had nothing at all to do with his father’s business.

Trimming dogs? What kind of a poofter does that for a living?

No son of his.

Not anymore.

So the boy won prizes for poodles made to look like pink unicorns. So what?!

That was no profession for a Man.

His son should have been in sales! Failing that, a doctor or a lawyer.

Blargh.

Just thinking about the boy was enough to cause him heartburn.

Bad heartburn.

Seriously uncomfortable.

And why did his arm feel so strange?

“Woof!”

What the…

“Woof!”, “Woof!”, “Yip! Yip!”, “Yap!”, “WOOF!”

Barking dogs surrounded the desk he was sitting at in his home office. Poodles of all sizes, in every color of the rainbow. Yipping, yapping, and barking at him.

Trimmed and dyed to look like other animals, and fantasy creatures too.

Why were there dogs in his house?!!

Damn! His arm hurt. He clutched at his arm and his chest.

“Hello, father.”

A man walked in from the shadows of an adjoining room.

“What are you doing here? Get out! Out of my house!! Argh…” a grunt of pain. A grimace on his face.

“My house. Soon,” said the dog trimmer he refused to call his son.

“I’ve disowned you! You fool! Nothing will be yours! Aargh!” he collapsed onto his desk.

“Mine,” said the dog trimmer. “As soon as I’ve wed your widow.”

His beautiful young wife walked in. Kissed his boy. Passionately. With tongue.

“I did warn him not to always work so hard,” she said after the long kiss, and smiled. “Not good for the heart at all.”

“I’m so glad you have always felt like I was someone you could call in an emergency like this. Finding my father dead at his desk! Oh, you poor thing. Must be so hard,” he kissed her hand. The one that wore the wedding ring…

The last thing he saw was a pair of pink poodles with unicorn horns chewing away at his favorite slippers in a corner.

Inaccessible Entrance

“Excuse me! Excuse me!! Hi! Could you help me out, please?!” I say to two men who are unloading packages from a van near the back entrance to the building where I’m going.

They glance at me. Stop unloading. Put down a box they were taking out of the van. Jump down and close its door. Walk towards me.

“Yeah? What is it?” one of them says to me.

“I was looking for the accessible entrance.  When I found it, it turns out there’s a pile of old books and magazines right next to it. That pile makes it just a little bit too tight for my chair, so I can’t get in that way. Do you think you could take me up in the cargo lift with you guys?”

“I don’t know…” the other one says. “We’re not supposed to let anyone in that way.”

“Shut up, Jake,” says the first one. “You heard the lady: the accessible entrance is blocked. Of course we’ll help you in.”

There’s something not right with this first one.

“Come on! We’ll take you right now,” he says.

“Don’t you want to get the rest of your packages first?” I ask.

“Nah, there’s no hurry. We’ll get them once you’re all fixed. Won’t we, Jake?”

“If you say so,” Jake replies. Clearly a lot less eager to make an extra trip than his colleague here.

There’s something so wrong with his colleague.

If I could, I’d back right out of this. Forget all about my plans. Come back another day with an assistant. But before I have a chance to do so, the first guy has already grabbed hold of my chair, and starts pushing me towards the cargo lift.

“You don’t need to push me,” I say.

“Oh, no, it’s no trouble at all. I’m happy to push you around.”

“That’s not… Please don’t touch my chair. I can move it myself just fine!”

“You can, but you don’t have to now.”

We are at the lift, and in we go.

Halfway between down and up, he stops the lift. Turns my chair so that I face him.

“What are you doing?” I ask.

“Time you pay for the help we’re giving you,” the guy replies, and smirks.

His buddy Jake also asks “What are you doing, Kyle? She doesn’t have to pay us. We’re paid okay for the job!”

“Not with money, she doesn’t. But while her legs don’t work, I bet she’s still got a sweet pussy between those nasty, useless things. If not, her ass will do just fine.”

“What?! Hell, no! Kyle! That’s not us! We don’t rape defenseless women in a wheelchair!”

“Speak for yourself, Jake. She expects me to use my time to help her do things she can’t do herself, I’ll take what I can get from that!”

I sigh.

“You will not be taking anything at all today, thank you very much,” I say.

I’ve taken my piece from its holder in my chair. I point it at his chest.

The bang is deafening inside the confines of the cargo lift.

His chest explodes. Blood splatters onto Jake and the walls.

He collapses.

Jake stares in disbelief.

“I’m sorry,” I say to Jake. “It seems like you could be a decent guy, unless of course your objection was only to the chair, but I cannot be leaving witnesses alive.”

His mouth has almost time enough to form a no, when a bullet finds his brain.

He, too, collapses onto the cargo lift floor. 

I sit quiet for a bit. Wonder if anyone outside the lift shaft heard the gun blasts.

Every little thing has been going wrong all day. First my car broke down, and I was forced to brave the public transport system to get here. No fun. No fun at all. Then the accessible entrance turned out to be quite inaccessible. And now these guys’ corpses are between me and the cargo lift controls.

I judge the distance to the lift controls.

I should be able to manage it.

If I can lift my legs high enough to step over their dead bodies… 

I’m surprised no alarm has gone off. No one seems to be rushing to the cargo lift to find out what has happened.

Good.

If no one waits for me once I get out of the lift, at least something will have gone right today…

Now I just need to decide if once I reach the controls I go up or down.

I’m tempted to go home. Forget the job. But I do need the money.

Would need it even if I didn’t have to fix my car.

Up it is.

I use my arms to push me up from the chair. Once on my feet, I carefully move towards the lift controls.

I take my time stepping over the corpses of the two men. Would not do to fall down now.

I reach the controls, and do manage to stand at them long enough to push the button for going up.

I have to get down on the floor then. Crawl back to my chair on my hands and knees.

The lift floor makes me wish I was wearing something that covers my knees today. (It’s hot. I wear shorts. Get over it.) Push the bodies out of the way, so I’m not hindered getting out of the lift.

By the time I’m back in the chair, I’m sweating like a pig, but it can’t be helped much. I take some baby wipes from my purse, and wipe my hands and legs off all the blood I can see on me now. Must look presentable. Gotta go kill my target.

Nobody expects the Spanish inquisition. Nor a woman in a wheelchair with clearly withered legs like mine to be a hired gun.

Caldey

“Get up. Please.” says Maryanne. “Even for a little while. You’ve been in that bed for weeks, I am told, and it smells something awful.”

“Not to my nose,” says Caldey.

“Your nose is too used to the stink. But believe me, anyone who hasn’t been lying in that bed like you have, does notice how bad it smells. Like I do. Let me change the sheets. Wash them a few times too.”

“I don’t deserve clean sheets.”

“Of course you do. Stop saying such stupid things! You’re a perfectly good person, and you deserve everything good in this world. Now get up. Go sit in that window seat, or something, while I change the sheets for you. Oh, and open the window. Air the place out properly. You’ll be surprised how much better that makes you feel.”

What surprises Caldey is that he actually does get up and out of bed. He was not expecting to do so today. Or tomorrow. Or next week.

His cousin Maryanne has always been good at ordering other people around. Even when they were children, she would… Oh… It didn’t matter. Nothing mattered at all.

Caldey closes his eyes. Wishes he could sleep. Shut her out. And all the world as well.

He surprises himself again, by speaking.

“Did you know him?”

“Who?” asks Maryanne as she yanks the filthy sheets off the bed. “Oh, your husband? I never actually met him, did I? Was supposed to. Last summer. But then I got that awful flu, and I couldn’t come. And then we were meant to try again at Christmas time, but by then, of course… Well… You know.”

“Already gone…”

Maryanne puts down the sheets. She stops for a moment. She never really stops for anything, ever, but now she stops, and just looks at Caldey.

“I’m so sorry…” she finally says. “For your loss. I can’t imagine… I’ve never been very good with emotions and words, now have I? But I really… Truly…”

“He was seeing someone else,” Caldey cuts in.

“What??” Maryanne is thrown.

“He was seeing someone,” Caldey says again. He looks at Maryanne. “He was seeing someone, I don’t know who, and he was going to leave me. He was going to leave me and he slipped on the ice and he died.”

“Oh…” says Maryanne.

“I haven’t said that to anyone yet,” says Caldey. “Not before now, I haven’t. I haven’t told anyone he was going to leave me. Would’ve left me anyway if he hadn’t died.”

“That’s…” Maryanne doesn’t know what to say.

“… Awful, isn’t it?” says Caldey, and laughs. “I don’t know what I’m supposed to… Am I meant to grieve him? Feel sorry that he died? When he was such a lying bastard this whole time? He was actually going to leave me. Just then. He was… He was just walking out. And I watched him. I saw him, he was… He was walking away, and… Then he died. Just like that. Gone… And I… I…”

“You don’t have to anything,” says Maryanne. “You don’t have to anything you don’t actually feel. I may not know much about anything at all, but I do know that. You don’t have to feel what you don’t feel. And you do not have to pretend.”

“But I do!” exclaims Caldey. “I do feel! And I do pretend…”

“It’s Okay…” says Maryanne, and even she can hear how wrong that is. She winces. “No. Not Okay, no… I don’t mean… Okay, but… I know it’s not okay, but someday it will be? I guess… I… I don’t know what I’m saying right now. I’m sorry. I’m… just really shocked, and I’ve never been any good at these things, and I…”

“No,” says Caldey. “You never have been.”

They look at each other in silence. Maryanne confused. Caldey growing cold.

“Maybe that’s why I said something. Finally. I could trust that you wouldn’t understand it any better than I do.”

Caldey turns to the window. Opens it at last. Leans on the sill, looking out. Not seeing.

Maryanne looks at him. Helpless. Turns back to the bedsheets. That’s something she can control.

She takes the sheets to the washer. Loads the machine. Comes back with clean ones from the linen closet.

Makes the bed.

Turns to tell Caldey, who is still staring out the window, that she is done.

Sees his head explode before she hears the sound.

Screams.

They find a woman sitting calmly beside a rifle on the ground.

She is peaceful now. The death has been avenged.

She knows the judges ruled it accidental, but they were wrong. He would never have died like that. Not so stupidly, no. Not slipping on ice.

He would never have left her! Not her love. She knows that Caldey pushed him down.

She knows that Caldey killed him. Took him away from her. Couldn’t stand that he loved her more.

And so she shot him dead.

And now that Caldey is gone, she is at peace.

Let them do what they will now.

She is at peace.

And nothing matters. Anymore.

It’s done.

Model

He had the most perfect skin ever created. That exact shade of olive so rarely seen in humans. Beautiful.

And when it rained, like now, thousands of tiny umbrellas poured forth from his pores, and kept him dry.

Truly perfect skin.

How could someone jealous destroy all this perfection? Even every single umbrella had been smashed.

That took time. Anger. Either strength or a suitable tool.

The umbrellas looked like they’d been stomped, not hammered. Good.

Whoever did this may have assumed that the stone underneath would not retain shoe prints. Or at least that all this rain would wash away whatever prints were made.

Then again, they may have been too angry to think about shoe prints at all.

Good. 

I scanned for prints and found them. Slightly damaged by the rain, but enough of them to build a complete picture, and to follow to where they’d come from.

The same kind of shoes the victim had worn. That narrowed the field a lot. Only the very richest could ever afford that brand. Unless the shoes were stolen, of course.

I saw where the victim had walked. Where the other prints had either followed, or been side by side. Had they come together to this place?

The shoe prints led me to the building where the victim had spent his last evening alive. Here, unfortunately, the flooring was more resistant to shoe prints. A much more expensive kind of stone.

I could only see a step here, a step there. Enough to lead me up.

I learned there had been a party last night. A fashion show, where the victim had walked among the guests, modelling a brand new hot hot brand of clothing. The biggest contract in the world of high high fashion today.

The victim was doing well the day he died.

Both the show and the party had gone smoothly, with nary a glitch. A fallen tray of champagne. Some urgent stitches on some of the clothes that should have fit. A lovers’ quarrel I quickly discovered had nothing to do with my victim at all…

Nothing out of the ordinary, really.

I scanned the environ one more time. Was surprised to discover a partial shoe print my first three scans had not shown.

This print was higher up still. Where none of the party guests were known to have gone.

Private residence, I was told. Someone awfully Hush Hush rich rich rich.

I knew that I was risking my career at this point. Going up to possibly confront the Hush Hush rich rich rich herself. But I saw the prints, and felt that I had to go.

If I was not mistaken, some of those prints were being made right now. The killer was up there. Walking circles. Nervous.

That seemed to rule out the Hush Hush rich rich rich. She would have had nothing to be nervous about. Completely untouchable. Unlikely to be unused to killing.

Someone was in her rooms and feeling nervous. Possibly planning to kill Hush Hush rich rich rich.

Most likely not. But that suspicion would be my excuse for entering her premises without permission.

Not that it would save my career. But it just might keep her from deciding to kill me. If she chose to be kind. 

Hush Hush rich rich rich was not at home. Emergency authorization, plus just a little bit of hacking that made me appear way above my pay grade, let me in.

The place was simply incredible.

I am rarely impressed by my surroundings. Too jaded to care, I suppose. But this one? So much expensive wood I almost whistled. Would have, had I not been aware of a killer’s movements in a back bedroom.

The place was a bit of a maze, but I found my way with scans. My steps were silent.

The pacing murderer was surprised midstep by my entrance into the bedroom he was in. He must have thought me a servant, for when he turned and spoke “I said I was not to be disturbed,” I was far more surprised than he.

He was him! The victim. He had killed himself.

Though this one had a scar across his face.

A scar that would prevent him ever modelling. A scar that appeared to be rather recent…

When I stared at him with my mouth open, instead of making myself scarce at his command, he realized “You are not a servant, are you?”

I closed my gaping mouth. Found my voice and said “Law enforcement, at your service. You are under arrest.”

Had he been thinking clearly, he would have laughed.

He was obviously under the protection of Hush Hush rich rich rich. I would never have been able to touch him, had he not made the mistake of attacking me.

He threw a book at me. And then a vase. All bets were off. I was permitted to defend myself.

The fight that ensued was brutal. He was clearly more than just a pretty face. Designed to do battle as well.

His little umbrellas lost their canopies. Were horribly sharp when they cut into my skin.

While lithe rather than bulky, his muscles were augmented. Their speed and strength far surpassed those of an ordinary human.

Had I been normal police make, I would have died. Lucky for me, I was military make instead. And not just ordinary military either. 

That too would have lost this fight.

The experimental modifications that I had were old, but enduring. The survival rate of soldiers having them 0,000000000000001.

I was the only one.

Whatever genetic weirdness, or just plain stupid stubbornness had made me survive them, could not be identified and dublicated. No matter how hard they tried.

I was the only one.

It had taken a hundred and fifty four years to hide my trail. Escape the fucking army.

I could only hope that this fight now would not reveal me.

It probably would. But I did not want to die.

Crashing through a table, a metal spike went through his heart. All that beauty dead. Again.

I would say perfection lost again, but for that scar.

Hush Hush rich rich rich walked in. Saw what had been done.

Her guards surrounded me. Would try to kill at a single word from her.

I am glad that word did not come.

She assessed the situation swiftly. No emotion in her eyes.

Clearly she had not loved the model much. A little bit, perhaps, but not enough to cry, and want to see me dead because of that.

“Thank you, Officer,” she said. “You must have saved my life here today.”

That is how she would play it. Not admit to having harbored a killer. Though it wouldn’t have hurt her even if she had admitted everything there and then.

So be it. It’s all the same to me. It doesn’t matter.

“All in a day’s job, My Lady. No need to thank,” I said as I bowed deep, and stumbled. Even I was affected by that fight, and would be wise to appear far more so.

Her eyes glinted. Did I overplay my role?

“Oh, but I simply must show you my gratitude, Officer. Matthew, John, take this kind Officer of the Law to his home. Shower him with gifts along the way.”

Yep. I was screwed. That was definitely greed in her eyes now.

The military would pay well to have me back. Contracts could be made.

I smiled. And graciously accepted the ride. Though the gifts would not be necessary.

“I must insist upon the gifts as well,” is what she said.

Poison, perhaps. A paralytic agent once I’m in the vehicle.

I imagined myself to be safe for the duration of the lift ride down. So many people knew I was in the building.

Stupid, really.

I should have been old enough to know better than to assume such a thing.

No matter.

Plenty of fight in me yet. For my survival.

For my freedom too.

Romantic Intermission

We both enjoy the opera tremendous much. We love them all, the Verdi, the Mozart, the moderns. We always have.

We met and married when we were but eighteen years old. We have shared and indulged all our various passions for fifty two years since then.

Today is a special day. Tonight we celebrate our one hundredth pray, our one hundredth catch and kill.

They are sitting right beside us. They are sharing our private box. We brought them here. They will be leaving with us when we go. During the intermission.

They find it all so romantic. They are sharing a private box at the opera with such a lovely, sweet old couple still so very much in love with each other after fifty two years together. In love at the age of seventy!

They hope to be just like us some day. They won’t be, but this they do not know. They could never be like us. They are too normal. And tonight they die.

During the intermission, I shall grow faint. They will help us leave. They will support me. They’ll help us to our car, and drive us home.

They will help me into the house where we will kill them. Later tonight we’ll dine upon their hearts.

It works so well. It always has. We’ve done this so many times before. Ninety nine exactly.

I have always had such a fragile appearance. For all my life, people have wanted to help me, assist me home.

It works even better now that we both are old and gray. Who would suspect such a sweet old lady? Who would fear such a lovely old couple so very much in love?

Well… Everyone should fear us, I suppose. Our romantic intermissions drenched in blood.

Killers in the Dark

There’s killers in the dark. I’m sure of it. There’s killers in the dark and they are hiding. They’re getting ready to kill again. I’m sure of it. I have no doubt that I am right.

– “Why won’t you believe me? There are killers in the dark! Why won’t anyone ever believe me???!” I scream.

No one does believe me. No one ever listens. Not to me.

They all go out in the dark. They all of them always go out in the dark and they are all of them always killed.

I don’t get it. I just don’t understand. Why they choose to ignore me. Why they will not listen and stay alive.

Those killers in the dark they are there. Oh, they are always there when I feel them. When I sense that they are near, they really are. Hiding in the dark they’re always there.

I try to warn them. All these people that I care about. I always try to warn them. Then I warn the ones I do not even like.

Why won’t they any of them listen to me???

That’s two hundred and twenty people I’ve warned so far. Ain’t none of them ever listened. Ain’t none of them lived and now, now I’m close to the point where I don’t care. I’m reaching the point where I no longer even try to save their lives.

They locked me up ten years ago. They locked me up. Thinking it would help. Just lock me up and shut me up with drugs.

I still tell them. I still warn them when there’s killers in the dark.

They still don’t listen. They still don’t care that what I say is only meant to help them. They still go out and die, because there’s killers in the dark and they don’t listen.

Why would they? Why would they listen to me? I’m crazy, aren’t I? All locked up and drugged up to keep me quiet. Why would they listen to me…

They go out and they get killed. Out there in the darkness where those killers hide.

How stupid people can be. They do not listen.

It takes three hundred and sixty seven before they talk to me again, the police.

They know I’m all locked up. They know the cameras follow me every single moment of every single day and night. I cannot be the killer that they seek. Nor can I talk to anyone that is. So they don’t talk to me again until it’s three hundred and sixty seven people I have warned who end up dead.

They know I did not kill them. They know I didn’t talk to anyone that did. So they ask me how did I know.

“There’s killers in the dark,” is what I tell them. “There’s killers in the dark. I know there are. I feel them. There’s killers in the dark tonight they kill again.”

They talk to me. They go away. There’s nothing useful I can give them, so they think. If only they had listened to my warning they would live.

Tonight the police are all dead.

Lilies in a Vase

So beautiful this perfectly decorated room. So bright with sunlight. So simple and so calm.

The walls are white. The furniture is functional. There is nothing in this room that isn’t carefully considered and fully thought through.

No clutter. No mess. No unnecessary frivolous trinkets. None.

A perfect calm. A perfect peace. A perfect balance of all things simple and serene.

One single splash of color. Lilies in a vase upon a table. Perfect touch.

Slowly a petal falls. All balance broken.

They say he cut up their five-year-old son while the parents watched helpless, nailed onto the wall.

They say he took ten days before they died.

They say he delivered flowers to their home. They say he had flowers delivered to their funeral as well. Sent lilies to them all. That’s what they say.

Blood

These people have been a threat to us for millennia. They are a danger can only be stopped in one way.

They must be stopped. We must be the ones to stop them.

We organized. We formed groups, battalions, troops. We became an army. All in secret of course.

They never saw us coming. Oh there were hints. The was the occasional arrest of someone. But that only fired us up the more strong. Made the rest of us more determined than ever to see the end of this scourge.

They’d oppressed us far too long. There comes a time, when a people will stand up.

They were the ones in power. We were the ones beneath.

They were the ones with all the weapons. Well, we came to change that, did we not?

Our weapons became the most powerful. Our troops the most loyal to the cause. And when we rose, their days were done.

We beat them all. We crushed and we defeated.

We killed their fathers and their sons. We shot their mothers, and we cut the throats of their daughters too.

No pillaging. No raping. Just a clear and simple genocide. No questions asked.

There’s a couple of them remaining still, I’m sure. There’s a few that are still breathing. Hiding somewhere. Possibly protected by some by poor fool misguided gentle soul.

We’ll get them too. We’ll end them all.

No chance will be given for them to rise again. No child will be left to grow up to avenge their parents’ fate.

We’ll get them all.

For now that we are free, now that they have lost all power over us, we shall never again surrender, and be the ones are weak.

We kill them all.

– “Belleath, my most loyal, my second in command, tell me, are the ones were found in the barn in the Cane district dead?”

– “They are. Every single one without exception,” the dark and strong and seasoned warrior Belleath replied.

– “Good. And now…”

– “And now it is your turn,” Belleath cut in.

– “What? What the hell do you mean my turn?”

– “Your grandfather was one of them.”

– “He raped my grandmother. You know that! There’s no love in me for them.”

– “I know,” replies Belleath. “But he is in your blood. Love, or no love, you are a descendant nonetheless. As were your children.”

– “Were?”

– “Your wife, your sons, your daughters, they were all of them killed an hour ago. Including the baby.”

– “Little Lena? You were her godfather!”

– “I know. I made sure they would snap her neck very quickly. I would not have her suffer needless long.”

– “My Lena… My wife… My sons? You bast…”

This is how far he got, when Belleath slit his throat. Only a gargling sound was left as he fell to the ground.

– “You know our people’s saying: He who holds a sword shall drown in blood. Appropriate, I should think, you drown in yours.”

Belleath watches life leave him. Sighs, then speaks again, when there is no one left to hear him do so: “I do not expect to live much longer myself.”

Belleath wipes his sword upon the garments of his friend. He touches the blood that has pooled on the floor, and draws a line across his forehead. Then he leaves the room, never looking back. Never returning there again as long as he’s alive.

Belleath dies. At the age of eighty nine he is poisoned by a rival. It takes eight days for him to succumb.

Those eight days are full of blood.