Bellatrixxx
Play with Yourself, not With Me
- Joined
- Feb 8, 2023
Her father had insisted she make the three day journey to Mansfield. Insisted. "Everything will be fine," he had said, kissing his daughter's forehead under the hem of her identifying crimson hood as she stood on the threshold on their small home, still hesitating. "The sooner you leave, the sooner you return. And we can't hold out until Spring. You're the only one I trust to make the journey."
He was right. There in Calithorne, things had never been easy. Cut off from the rest of the world surrounded by the Grey Wood and backed against the base of the mountains, Scarlet had only ever known hardship and hard work. And now, with winter only just now passing its solstice, they still had a far way to go before their lake was thawed and the sun returned to their farmlands.
The people were hungry. Alammor's King had sent out ravaging enforcers, brutal Sheriffs, to each and every one of his villages to claim higher taxes this past summer, uncompromising in his need for funds for his prideful invasion against their northern neighbor, Fjordland. The poorest among them had suffered greatly, but the farmers and fishermen of Calithorne had always known how to stick together, their village well established many generations ago by the present inhabitant's great great grandfathers.
Scarlet Quilles, and her father Keran, were among the long-standing ones. If the village had the presence and money to have a mayor, Keran would be it, his blood running deep through the soil and roots of the surrounding trees, his love for the people unequaled. He looked out for -everyone-, no matter their own personal opinion of him or his daughter, and was extremely respected in the community for it. He had been the one who attempted to negotiate with the Sheriff that came, demanding they pay an exorbitant amount of wheat, barely, smoked fish, and salted pork, with Keran trying to explain if such amounts were given there wouldn't be a damn Calithorne come Spring. He had nearly lost his life, beaten at his age by the enforcing crew before extra stores and wares were outright stolen, all in the name of the King.
Now, with nearly still a month to go in the season, he was sending his only child off on an incredibly dangerous journey to the nearest town over. Mansfield was larger, wealthier, sturdier, and often had a surplus to sell. Scarlet had always been a crafty girl, often concerning the neighbors around her who thought she better off sewing instead of tanning leather, or weaving baskets rather than shooting arrows into the heart of a target over thirty yards away. Keran had always indulged Scarlet, allowing her to explore all of her heart's desires, and never regretting doing so. He had lost her mother, his wife and the love of his soul, in the birthing, a woman with the same color hair of fiery bold strands, and he honored her memory by raising Scarlet to be just as strange, odd, and as wonderful as the original woman.
And she was. Raised now twenty years in the great shadows of the Grey Wood, Scarlet had a propensity for the dark and mysterious. While the other children had kept away from its borders, choosing to splash on the banks of the nearby lake, Scarlet would sit as close as she dared to the edge, a sliver of charcoal darkening her fingers as she drew strange beings and shapes on an old weathered cloth. She was the only one who trespassed within occasionally, despite the warnings of the dangers that lurked. Bears, snakes, and of course the legendary Guardian that was said to be a wolf cursed by the Gods to roam and roar for all eternity. Sometimes, when the stars and moon were considerably bright in the night sky, Scarlet was sure she would hear something unnatural far off into the forest, or once or twice may have caught a glimpse of movement in the distance with her sharp sight. And of the few times she would drag Rican to the upper hayloft of his father's barn to secretly bed away the urges of being a red-blooded woman, she swore she once saw a pair of golden eyes deep in the foliage, leering and searing through the mist at her with such intensity she had quivered and cried out in a way that had absolutely nothing to do with the man holding her hips and thrusting behind her.
The Guardian may have just be a legend, a trick of the mind conjured by a woman strange enough to give it life. Her father just chuckled away her stories and tales whenever she went to him with questions, telling her it was just a dream of an overacting mind, yet Scarlet still really and truly believed.
But belief and fairy tales wouldn't put food in their bellies. Adorned in her blazing telltale cloak and gloves, the rest of her body in a dark brown vest with fitted leggings that laced up the side of her legs with cord, Scarlet had journeyed off on a mule-drawn cart towards Mansfield. In the back were some of her own creations, charcoal and graphite drawings on stretched leather within wooden frames, oiled leather articles ranging from clothing to sheathes, and an artfully crafted bow made from white oak that she hoped would catch a fair price. She had her own main weapon, a trusty thing made of yew at her right hip on the seat of the cart with a quiver stuffed with bolts between her knees. Thin daggers littered her person as well all under her wool hooded cloak, a new interest of hers that she only recently realized, as well as some packed fresh water, a loaf of brown bread, and a bit of salted pork.
Thankfully it had been uneventful going, as well as there. The bow had been traded for quite a few sacks of wheat, some leather items had been exchanged for a few slabs of smoked venison, and an artwork piece or two had bought a large basket of eggs. The visit was short as she had known Calithorne was waiting, but also because something had been gnawing at her for days. In fact, when she had known she would be sent to Mansfield in the first place, instinct had screamed at her to stay, to hold off for a few days and settle in. But father had insisted.
Insisted.
The smoke had been spotted rising through the early morning air miles away, its thickness signifying many large fires. Abandoning the cart along the road was the easiest decision she made, unfastening the ties to grab onto the mule and spur it into what constituted a gallop for the beast. She was far lighter than the laden cart, so the animal ran in a greater speed than she would have been able to travel on foot towards what would become her worst nightmare.
The sounds of screaming hit her first before any sounds of fighting. Ash from thatched roofs and wood beams thickened the air, making Scarlet cough as she kicked the mule to make him go faster, but it did not deter her. Calithorne was in flames, almost every home burning and burning quickly as people ran either from the hacking swords or in search of their loved ones amid the chaos... Only to be hacked down seconds later. The mule reared up on its hind legs in fear when it reached the border, not accustomed to the sights and sounds of a battle, no matter how small or one-sided it might have been, but Scarlet was already in the process of dismounting and proceeded to continue the downward slid off its rump.
Landing firmly on her feet, a plume of ash erupted around her boots as the mule scurried off screaming, leaving her alone as she lifted her bow upright with her left hand. Her oiled-leather archer's gloves, as red as her cloak, reached her elbows and coated her fingers like a second skin. With practiced movements, an arrow was lifted, notched, pulled back, aimed and—
*THWIP* The feathers angled the arrow as it sliced through the air, thudding deep into the chest of a man in black armor, caught with his sword raised to bring it down on Louise, the cobbler’s wife. The woman screamed, turned and began to run, only to be gutted seconds later by a different raider in black. Scarlet was hardly making a difference with her presence, the number of enemies far too many. For every one she fired down with her shots, killing them one by one, there seemed to be five more, chasing families out of their homes by the flames only to run straight into their blades.
"Father!" She screamed into the wind, scanning her surroundings as she continued to move forward. The roof of a nearby home collapsed in a horrendous crashing sound that deafened her ears, the fire roaring as it consumed the beams like kindling. She ducked against the blast, her cloak billowing behind her shoulders, and when she stabilized herself another arrow was notched as she advanced.
"Father!!"
"Scarlet!!" The voice of Keran cut through and Scarlet ran towards the sound, ignoring those around her as they fought for their lives for an unknown cause. She found him, standing his ground like a soldier with her great grandfather's sword against a taller, broader man. She aimed and fired, the arrow sinking deep through the assailant's throat, enough for him to gurgle and freeze, giving Keran the pause needed to finish him by taking off his head with a mighty swing. There were still more of the black-clad raiders in Calithorne, but at least he was safe. With relief on her face, Scarlet stepped forward right when Keran turned to her, his arms open to run and embrace her, thankful she was safe, when suddenly...his face fell in shock.
"What has happened? Who are these men?" Scarlet approached, not realizing just yet what has already happened. "What do they want? Are they....are they...?" She frowned at the rigid way her father was standing. Blood suddenly started to drip and pool to the dirt behind his ankles. "Papa?"
She reached him when he buckled forward, catching him just in time before he fell to the earth, and embedded between his shoulder blades was an axe, expertly thrown. Slippery blood coated her gloves, and she wailed a sound of dismay at the sight, hands shaking as she laid him down to the scorched ground as best and easy as she could. "No, no, Papa, I'm here! You can't leave me! Stay awake, please, please stay awake," She cupped at his cheek, trying to keep his face turned towards her as her eyes pleaded with him. "I'll find something to stop the bleeding. Just hold on, just—No! Get off me! Stop it, stop—NOO!!"
Hands had suddenly grabbed her roughly by her shoulders, ripping her away from her dying father. Her hood fell back, spilling out her mass of cinnamon hair as Scarlet fought and struggled, heaving before reaching for one of the thin blades at her bicep then twisting to shirk it once, twice, three times into the upper chest of the one who grabbed her. He roared, falling back as she moved to straddle him between her thighs, now clutching the hilt with both hands to raise it high above her head and bring it down ten more times, spraying blood all across her face, arms, and chest until there was a gaping crater in his pectoral cavity. Her rage and distress overwhelmed her as she gritted her teeth, tears cutting pathways down her bloody and ashy cheeks before a second raider grabbed her by her hair and yanked her back. He kicked the blade from her hands before sending a cruel knee straight into her gut, knocking the wind from her, and Scarlet landed on her hands and knees, heaving into the dirt. She tried to crawl back towards her father, but she was kicked in the ribs again, sent rolling onto her back in a daze, her green eyes wide towards the smoke-filled sky. Blood dripped down her bronze skin, as red as her articles, and soon the shadow of her intended executioner blocked the sun from her sight, looming, sword raised to bring it down between her large, heaving breasts.
"Time to die, Red." He said, stating a common moniker directed towards her by anyone who looked upon her.
Scarlet closed her eyes with a tired exhale, waiting for the impact to strike her heart.