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Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by Lillian Thorne
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Lillian Thorne NO LONGER A MOD, PM the others if you need help

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What have I done?

The words were a primal scream in his head as he dashed through the snow that was still piling up as the storm bore down on the village. It was not the first of the season, nor would it be the last, but it was unexpected. Blind Nadeen with her milky eyes usually started squalling a half a day before any storm hit them. She’d stand on her stoop and shout for all to hear. She’d done so for so long that even the animals knew to seek shelter when she started squalling. She’d said nothing about this storm and so the village had begun it’s celebrations. It was midwinter after all.

As he’d torn into the village, his heart pounding as the first gusts of snow began to work down the mountain, he’d passed Nadeen’s house and seen her standing in the doorway in her nightdress, bewilderment written clear on her seamed face.

What have I done? He asked himself again as he burst through the back door of the tavern and felt the warmth of the cooking fire blast against his cheeks like a comfort he did not deserve. Voices barely paused in their celebration at his appearance.

“Oskar!” The voice, like a blow, from behind the counter, past the sounds of celebration. He looked up and saw his father glaring at him, his brow knitted, his eyes full of disapproval and suspicion. “What are you about?” He barked.

“Nothing Father.” He said and then scuttled up the stairs before his father could do more than scream after him.

“Your boots dammit!”

Oskar didn’t stop, he ran until he reached his room at the top, a small space tucked under the eaves with just enough room for a bed, a trunk and a small bit of desk he’d made under the watchful eyes of Vasily. He threw himself onto the bed, soaked coat, boots and all. He pulled the thin pillow over his head, blocking out any scrap of light and trying to mute the screaming in his head. Hiding from the sounds he was afraid to hear.

What had he done? He looked back over the collection of actions and events that made up his colossal mistake and saw each step clearly and winced at each wrong turn. Had it been summer when it had started? Or had it been sooner? He wasn’t certain. Certainly some of it had been going on for years. He didn’t fit, he didn’t belong, that was the core of things, or so he believed. His father certainly made him feel that every time he offered a correction or a suggestion on how Oskar might be more of a man, how he might be less useless. So many little hurts and slights, it was hard to see where it started.

His first clear mistake had been in going to see the witch. Lumilla. So many villagers had gone to her, barren wives wanting babes, young men wanting to know who would make a good wife, or what would be the best field to clear. Little things, big things. They all knew that if they needed answers they could head up the mountain, ask and the witch would tell them

Except Oskar had gone, to see if all the things the Priests had been telling him were true, to see if he should go with them like they suggested and find a place where he fit. He wanted her to clear up his confusion. Their words troubled him. When they spoke to him with their smiles and their kind eyes and their gifts of books it all made sense and his heart swelled to hear it. But when they left, like they always did, the words didn’t ring so true and he felt conflicted in his heart. So the week before they were due, the week of midsummer he’d gone up the mountain and knocked on the witch’s door. But she didn’t come. He knocked and knocked and still she didn’t come. That wasn’t the way things were supposed to go. He felt a rare flood of the stubbornness that seemed to be Oksana’s way with everything fill him. He kept on knocking until a voice finally called to him.

“Go, I will not see you.”

The voice was indescribable. Low and fluid, like wind through the trees but with a hint of birdsong to it. It was sad, so sad that he felt his own throat closing up, cutting off the bile that had been growing.

“Please.” He’d called. “I have a question. I was told you would answer.”

“Not for you.” She’d said. “I have no answers for you.”

And that was it. She did not speak again even though he stayed and knocked long past the point where he felt foolish. He’d asked Oksana about it, had she gone? Of course she had. She’d gone up and asked how to talk her Papa into letting her learn the good stuff. She’d had a similar experience, but the voice had been that of an old woman, cracking with irritation and age. Oksana had called her a bad name and never looked back.

Oskar hadn’t been able to let it go. He’d gone back up a few days later. While everyone was celebrating the solstice with drink and music. He’d hung at the edges of the gathering and when he was certain no one would notice he’d slipped up the mountain. He arrived just as she was leaving her house. It had been dark and she’d shone like the moon, softly glowing, luminous. She was the most beautiful woman he’d ever seen. He’d had enough sense to stay hidden, to bite back his gasp at the sight of her. But even so she’d paused and looked around for a moment before proceeding up a path he would have sworn wasn’t there earlier. She moved as if she were pulled by some force. He followed, even though he knew it was wrong.

She seemed distracted as she’d walked, all but floating along the path and Oskar had a long enough time to begin to appreciate the sway of her hips and the curves of her body as she’d walked. At long last she’d come to a pool in a small clearing. Standing before the pool she held her hands up, her arms a crescent just big enough to capture the full moon that could be seen through the trees. Oskar’s skin prickled, his heart pounded when she lowered her hands and slipped out of the robe and into the pool. He knew he shouldn’t watch, it was obscene, it was wrong, but he couldn’t look away. Finally he’d wrested enough control over himself to look away. He felt enough shame to force himself away. He’d gone crashing down the mountain filled with thoughts that were not pure.

When the priests came a week later he was still wracked with guilt and stirred up thoughts. They were only too happy to take his confession. They were so happy to hear his words and absolve him of his sins. If the priest who heard his confession had eyes that were overly bright, overly interested Oskar hadn’t thought much about it. He was absolved. For months he’d felt lighter, warded by their forgiveness.

But then the priests had come back just the day before. They had come in number, quietly and only a few had come to the village. The grandmother’s had watched them like crows, their eyes dark and curious but they had said nothing even though the priests presence had made it hard to get ready for the Midwinter celebrations. They watched and waited, holding their tongues. It was the way of things. Whenever the priests came, no matter how inconvenient, the villagers just played along. The Priests did what they always did, even if their timing was off and when they were done going through the motions they sought out Oskar, finding him chopping wood behind the tavern.

What they asked of him was so simple. Would he show them where the witch was? Oh how he’d agonized, he wasn’t supposed to talk about the witch, the words tasted like ash in his mouth but he’d been so burdened before, so troubled. They had helped him, they had told him what he needed to do to feel whole. She had not, she had turned him away. Their smiling faces, their kindness had won him over. Tonight he’d taken them up. There had been so many of them, all robed in black and they had followed him silently through the woods like shadows until they caught sight of the house. They hadn’t even waited for him to point it out. Once they saw it they swarmed past him, battering against the door in a swirling black mass. He’d heard her cry out, her voice just as the one that Oksana had heard, old and crackling.

“Oskar, Run!” she’d screamed and her voice had been tinged with very real fear.

Then it was lost in the sound of her door splintering. He ran. As sounds of chaos and pain erupted behind him he charged down the mountain, falling more than once but never, ever stopping. It was Midwinter, the solstice and the village was tucked away in warm houses but certainly still awake. Someone must stay awake all night to make certain the sun rose again after the longest night. Oskar worried for the first time in his life, that it might not.

He could hear sounds of celebration in the Tavern below him and despite himself he strained to hear sounds past that. Lifting a corner of his pillow he blinked tear-filled eyes as he caught something in the distance. Pulling the pillow off of his head he sat up and scurried to the small window and threw open the shutters letting in the cold night air and the swirling blasts of snow. There, he heard it again. A low rumble with a strange scuttling to it, like dead leaves scraping across cobbles. Leaning out the window he made himself look up the mountain. He made himself see what he’d wrought. Billowing blackness was sweeping down the mountain like the leading wall of snow in an avalanche. But the blackness did not knock down trees, it swept around them, engulfed them and in the blackness he could hear things. Voices, shrieks, howls, unholy things given voice, rolling down the mountain towards the Village.

He saw movement then, Old Blind Nadeen stood in the center of the Village in nothing but her night dress, her white eyes turned towards the coming blackness.

“It comes!” she shrieked loud enough that the din in the tavern below stilled. “Brace yourselves!” she screamed again.

“It comes!” and then it hit. The lead bit of blackness hit the edge of the village, rolling over it as it had the trees. Where it hit animals and people began to scream.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by Numerica
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Numerica

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Tjasa smiled as she put in the last stitch of the embroidery on her hat. She knotted the thread, and carefully wove the loose end underneath the backs of the previous stitches. The beautiful dark blue hat with white embroidery was made with the last of the wool she had dyed with Midwinter in mind. She had already finished the overcoat made of the same wool, but the arrival of the priests of the white god had delayed her in finishing the hat.

Her father had gone to the tavern, offering to bring her with him, but she had refused to go out until she had finished. It would look every so silly to be wearing her old hat with her new coat and dress. She brushed and re-braided her hair before putting the hat on and leaving the house. She was surprised to see that it was snowing, and she wondered if perhaps Old Blind Nadeen was sick.

She was almost to the tavern when she heard Nadeen's first shreik. She turned to look, an instant of confusion at the old woman's state of undress swept aside as she followed the old woman's gaze and saw the wall darkness, filled with monsterous eyes and even darker shadows. Her first thought was of the safety of her father's presence, and she started to run for the tavern without even pausing to think about what she was seeing. "Papa!" Her voice was filled with terror, but it could barely be heard above the din as the people who had been engulfed began to scream.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by Igraine
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This was the very first year she was allowed to carry a flame of her very own for Midwinter to welcome back the sun, and little Antonina Vukašina could not be prouder. It was a great responsibility, to bear one of the candles that would help light the spice-festooned midwinter log at her Nana and Poppop's home. And it took not a single jot of her joy away, that she was actually bundled head to toe, hiked up in her Papa's arms. And it mattered not in the least to the little girl, that her candle was actually safely ensconced from chubby little mittened fingers and the wind alike in a small, cleverly built lantern that fit just rightly in her hand. Tonight she was a big girl - well, she was going to be 4-years old in the Spring after all - carrying the flaming invitation to the sun for her little family tonight.

Vasily smiled tenderly as he looked down to his little girl, her sweet round face framed in a grey fur-lined hood, rosy cheeks illuminated by the candle lantern she held so carefully. It was a rare smile, a bright bit of sunshine in the night reserved almost entirely for Antonina. It was a smile that wordlessly told his sweet girl she was doing a wonderful job of carrying their family's light, a perfect job, a job like none other he'd ever seen accomplished better in all his life.

Tonight he was taking Antonina to the cozy home of his in-laws, Nadejda and Sergei, to celebrate the Midwinter Solstice and the return of the sun after the longest night of the year. Petya had been invited as well of course, but for the moment he was not entirely sure where his little brother had gotten off to. Vasily sighed and shrugged it off, lifting his daughter in his arms just enough to make her giggle and look to him curiously, wondering if Papa was playing some game or other.

This was not a night to be particular about timing or lateness, though Vasily had to admit to himself he was a touched irked. But no, no matter. Not really. Vasily was often a touch irked with his brother who, it seemed, either deliberately nursed ways to get under his older brother's skin or simply did not care that he did so. Besides, Nadejda and Sergei were beautiful people, warm and decent, and any night they could have their granddaughter about? That was a full and happy night regardless.

He pulled up before his in-laws cabin closer to the center of the village, pulling the glove off one hand with his teeth and rapping against the solid wood door. "Merry Solstice wishes, Nana and Poppop!" Vasily called out, "We have brought the light in the darkness tonight!"

The door opened in an instant, the laughing faces of Nadejda , with Sergei right behind his wife, there to grab up their granddaughter in loving arms, and welcome the young man they truly had come to love as the son they never had.

"Nana! I carried the light!" Antonina beamed as the savory, luscious scent of Nadejda's cooking wafted through the doorway. No doubt there would be venison stew and herbed potatoes, fresh bread and pies baked up especially with some of the last of the year's fruits.

"Oh my goodness! Well you are so grown up, Nina!" Nadejda crooned lovingly, reaching to take the little girl from Vasily's arms.

And that was when Blind Nadeen's screams reverberated through Adishi, the harbinger of a blackness like none of them had ever known or imagined could exist.

Antonia startled in her Papa's arms, bright blue eyes wide with surprise as the candle lantern slipped from her fingers to fall at the threshold and wink out its light. Wide, shocked eyes darted from Miss Nadeen and the blackness that swallowed them all, and then to the fallen candle. Instantly she burst into great tears, wailing inconsolably as she buried her face in her father's warm coat. The terrors in that blackness were too much for her young mind to understand, and all the little girl could grasp was the least horror of them all. "Papa!" she wept miserably, "The candle! I dropped the candle!"

Vasily was no less horrified, no less frightened than his daughter, but he was a grown man and all he knew was that his beloved home and all its people, were suddenly engulfed in a supernatural, seething darkness. "No, no Antonina, it's all right, it wasn't your fault sweet girl." Vasily's heart broke for his daughter, and yet he whispered swiftly, kissing the top of her fur hood lovingly, hugging her to him fiercely for a moment longer before he turned to the pale, stunned faces of his in-laws.

"Nadejda, Sergei, take Antonina. Bolt the door. I will return, as swiftly as I can." Whether they protested his departure or not, Vasily would never know. All that mattered was his precious girl was safe in her Nana's arms, behind solid walls and a thick door in this unnaturally black night.

'Petya... ' That one name reverberated through his thoughts, even as he sprinted to where Nadeen stood in her nightgown, a beacon in the miasma of that had fallen over Adishi like a vile blanket of filth. "It is me, Nadeen. Vasily," he said swiftly as he lifted the rail thin woman into his arms, holding her gently but close. Whatever in this world that had just descended on their little village, this was no place for a frail and blind elderly woman dressed only in her nightgown to be wandering.

He heard the screams of men and women and animals alike in the unnatural darkness, and was both relieved and terrified that he had not, as yet, heard Petya's voice. By memory alone, Vasily made his way toward Nadeen's cottage, sick to his stomach with the knowledge he may have already failed their father, and his one dying wish.

'Protect your brother, Vasily. Watch over him, just as I would, and let no harm come against him... '
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by MelonHead
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“Drink, drink, drink!” The chanting of those surrounding the valiant few revellers permeated the lively atmosphere of the tavern, spreading out even into the streets outside. Adrian let himself become consumed by the sound of immense merrymaking, even as he gulped the raw liquid down his throat. He set his tankard down, a scant few seconds after another, and felt his head rush as oxygen returned to his body sending a wave of debilitating inebriation crashing through his bloodstream. It was truly intoxicating, and he had yet to find any other feeling like it.

A great, good natured, cheer was loosed for the mighty drinkers who finished in time, then activity returned to that loud slightly above comfortable hubbub common in a busy tavern. Adrian sat back in his seat with a sigh, looking around at his friends and brothers, surrounded as he was by the other farm workers (save his Father). Viktor, his eldest brother, smiled good-naturedly and patted Adrian on the shoulder, shaking him from his dangerous restfulness.

“Nice one brother, you always could down a tankard aye?” He bellowed rhetorically, and the others laughed and Adrian felt a moment of pride, however misplaced, it was a warm fuzzy feeling he felt seldom.

“You know it Viktor, it’s my drink after all!” Adrian replied, and David nodded in approval, the oldest there by far.

“Not a bad drink at all kid, good batch, not too fruity, not too rough.” He said, and the others agreed with the statement, in fact Adrian was about to order another tankard when an unwholesome silence suddenly fell upon the tavern. People shivered as the air grew unexplainably cold, and Adrian perked his ears up just in time to catch the tail end of a terrible scream. The screams were like a contagion, growing in volume so that the tavern goers were aware that multiple voices had joined the first to send a wave of inexplicable terror through the little town. Adrian rose quickly and gracelessly, joining the group of elder men who were rushing to see what the matter was, most expecting fire. It was far worse.

Men and women and children were rushing haphazardly through the streets, grabbing relatives and loved ones and making a beeline for whatever cover they could find. Two women brushed past Adrian, almost unbalancing him in his semi-intoxicated state as they rushed into the tavern, their eyes wild. From across the way a complete darkness was creeping like an oncoming storm, the like of which the young farm-hand had never seen before. It terrified him to the very core.

“Everyone into the tavern!” Men were shouting, Viktor had taken it upon himself to grab some of the little ones who had no hope of reaching safety and thrusting them into the presumed safety of the well-lit tavern. Adrian just stared dumbstruck, and a thousand blood-red eyes stared back at him from the dark expanse, the screaming reaching a fever pitch.

Then, he felt a strong hand on his shoulder and David was there, pulling him through the doors alongside the last few stragglers, before the heavy wooden door was pulled shut and the screeches were cut and muffled. Darkness enveloped the town.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by Mokley
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"Once, a long time ago, up high on a snowy white mountain, a great tsar lived in a shimmering palace, where the courtyards were summertime even in winter, and golden apples grew on the trees. But every night, while the castle was sleeping, a great fiery bird would swoop down out of the sky, and snatch one of the tsar's golden apples, and fly away on his great fiery wings -- woosh ... woosh! -- with the stolen, shimmering apple clutched tight in his claws."

Chiudka leaned forward in her chair til it creaked and threatened to topple her for the way she waved her arms and curled her fingers and wooshed over her young audience, while the proper adults swung their pints and pretended to be better than legends and fairy tales. She cast a sly smile around the tavern -- and though she competed with a chorus of raucous song and several men chanting Adrian into yet another drink, she caught several ears turned her way.

Her father owned one of them, and Jaroslav another. He'd arrived alone and looking well, with a promise that Tjasa would follow him shortly. Probably perfecting her braids for the new hat that her grandmother had given her, Chiudka thought with a grin. Indeed, Gotsiana sat near the door with a new puppy her lap, and she leaned eagerly forward every time someone let in the snow, hoping Tjasa in her pretty hat would be swept in with it. Chiudka very seriously considered that Tjasa's late entrance was very much on purpose. She would be sorry for her grand entrance when she missed the best part of the story.

"Finally, one night the tsar had had just about enough of that thieving fiery bird, and he called his three sons to him, and he said --"

IT COMES!

The door was open, and a blast of snowy air carried the shrill warning -- and though the voice clearly belonged to Nadeen, it wasn't a voice any of them had heard before.

Chiudka gathered her skirts and rose to her feet while the men pushed outside and the emptying tavern quickly grew chill. For a still, dark moment the seats were empty. The fire crackled. She took a step, and hurried with another, and suddenly the doorway was filled with familiar and weathered faces twisted so fearfully she didn't quite recognize them. Her first thought was avalanche, and her heart dropped into her stomach.

Viktor pushed children into her arms, and she hushed them and herded them gently toward the others. Everything would be all right, she whispered, the tavern was built of great blocks of stone to protect them. But that sound -- a skittering rumble, less like the roll of stone and snow, more like the hiss of leaves on a dark storm wind. Where was Tjasa?

She was frightened by proximity to the terror of strong men, but she was terribly curious to see what horror could cause their eyes to grow so wide. And Tjasa was still not among them. She pushed her way through the crowd, and the closer she got to the door and to the cold and to old Nadeen's screams, the harder she pushed. Stay there, Mama, she said, and she slipped past the push of people and stumbled out into the stifling snow.

Her breath clouded before her face, and she looked left. She saw Vasily's silhouette, guiding Nadeen, quiet now, back toward her cottage. Good. Good. Another breath billowed, and she looked right, and in the swirls of snow she saw a familiar shape. In one breath there was relief and an urgent fear: "Tjasa!" Chiudka gathered her skirts and sprinted, kicking away the snow. In the corner of her eye, something dark was approaching.

Chiudka nearly crashed into Tjasa and grasped the girl's arm in both her chilled hands. "Hurry, we have to go, come on!" And then, through the white billows of their breath, she followed Tjasa's gaze.

It wasn't real. Her eyes were playing tricks on her, making her see things that couldn't exist. It was a dream, a nightmare, a terrible fever that she would wake from at any moment. But even in her dream, she squeezed her dear niece's arm and barreled through the snowdrifts for the tavern, just as she heard the echo of a door shut tight.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by Scoundrel
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Patience was merely a non-existent term to a man like Zelfos. Clearly, he doesn't conceive the practice of it nor would he even bother displaying the slightest ounce. But this day was one of those rare ones. He had been patient for the whole time waiting for his son Tristen to arrive home and from reasons he couldn't recognize by himself, his quick edginess was somewhat, held back while he took the wait.

He stood from his chair as he took a quick glance outside the wondrous view of the night sky. Feet were brought to a march while puffing streams of smoke from his wooden pipe. Zelfos continued to do it as he reached the window, leaning one elbow on the wooden rail. A puff of smoke was then followed and then his thoughts stuck heavily to Tristen. What could have been taking the boy so long? For certain, it wasn't the best time for his son to arrive at the current hour. He'd least expected him to be home in the late afternoon as he would daily. Truth to be told, it wasn't actually the first time that Tristen would arrive late at night. He had worse days but no matter how much honesty he could muster up for an explanation, Zelfos wouldn't often be at his favor. Tristen had given up trying to convince his father's beliefs. Trying to withstand his harsh voice being raised against him was the best method he could use.

Exhaling yet another wisp of smoke, Zelfos remained gazing at the dark sky until he lost his thoughts on Tristen. A loud creak of the door suddenly interrupted him, luring his sights away from the night. A pair of low-cut boots clattered the ground, taking a step forward before shutting the door gently. Tristen had no desire of greeting his father but of course, even if he wouldn't be receiving any warm welcomes, he would still maintain his polite disposition which he often wore wherever he goes. Tristen breathed a heavy sigh, wanting to indicate hints that he was in a weary condition and in no means, ready for a scolding.

"Go to the table and eat your dinner or at least, if you haven't taken one yet." Surprisingly, what was followed was a dear concern of his father which Tristen obviously didn't expect. But something told him that Zelfos actually wanted something in return.

Tristen reached for his pouch which then clinked objects the moment he shook it on his clutches. He then handed the pouch directly to his father without taking a glimpse of his face. "Here," Zelfos immediately grabbed the pouch, his expression hid the notion of greed that Tristen hated so much. "I know you wanted that in exchange of your concern. So I hope you won't be raising your voice today, I am extremely tired." No response was then followed. For once Tristen felt good delivering his sharpness against his greedy father but sometimes, he would consider on being cautious as he disliked arguments rising.

Tristen took his coat off and hung it beside a wall. He marched past the table and directed himself towards his bed. "I assume you already ate your dinner." Zelfos said. Tristen liked to falsely admit that he did but he decided not to respond. The vile cold had gotten him, nearly draining his humanity away. He took his boots off as he sat on his bed, then he laid himself down, drifting his thoughts away from everything.
IT COMES!

Tristen didn't want to wake up nor did he want to be awoken. But his father shook him out of bed violently that he had to force himself out of his comfort. The shriek though, was something that mostly bothered him rather than the presence of his father. Tristen rubbed his eyes only to see an uneasy look on his father's expression. At first he thought it was of no worry even after hearing a shriek uttered by a familiar voice. But after it was repeated, Tristen concluded that something was about.

After wearing his low-cut boots, he rushed hurriedly at the window, seeing the sight of old Nadeen out in the open night. However, it wasn't her sight that needed to be attended completely. Tristen's eyes widened as he took a peculiar visage of the eerie blackness that crept like a violent storm. Men and women shouted afterwards, some running to take cover inside their houses believing that they could somehow escape the grasps of the unknown. Tristen was bewildered of old Nadeen's presence, concerned that she shouldn't be out there standing in the midst of an uprising chaos.

Tristen ran to the door but his father intervened him, standing right beside him before cracking the door open. Zelfos shook his head with his eyes contradicting to Tristen's attempt. "I need to, father. Old Nadeen is still out there." Dashing away, Tristen stepped out of the house, veering his head to whichever path he could traverse to take old Nadeen.

By the time he caught his pace, someone had already stepped forward and took the old blind lady. It was Vasily. Tristen breathed a relieved sigh but he didn't want to return yet. He followed their tracks even in the midst of people straying away from the confusion. Tristen ran and continued to do so until he kept himself up with them. Finally, he arrived at the old lady's cottage. Spotting Vasily, Tristen sprinted towards him, kicking heaps of snow along the way. "Vasily!" He shouted. As Tristen halted, he bent his body slightly to breathe out some exhausted breaths. "Is....she alright?" Tristen looked at the old lady and as his breaths finally settled, he took another glimpse of the creeping darkness that is about to take an invasion. "This isn't good"
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by ButtsnBalls
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A few hours ago...
“You are as a rock, silent and unmoving. But when the moment arrives, strike fast like lightning. Be brave and act quick.”

This quote was one of the few things Bogdan remebered about his father, beyond this, there were the hunting trips. Vlad Matisky, whom now was nothing more than faint shapes for the adult Bogdan, was insistent bringing his son along on his hunts. Bogdan could remember stalking and observing a buck behind a giant pine tree, the very same pine he hid behind at this very moment.

Coincidentally, the animal in the clearing felt like the same deer he saw his father killed a decade ago. Every movement of Vlad was pin-point precise, he would lay prone for hours without moving, and at the blink of an eye, impale the arrow in the deer's forehead. To this day, Bogdan tried in vain to imitate the hunter from his youth. His hands slowly bushed the quiver, snatching an arrow and stringed it inline with his right eye. As quiet as his heavy boots could allow, Bogdan swung into the opening, bow fully drawn and then let loose.

With sharp swoosh sound, the arrow flew through the midst of the buck's antlers. The deer, who was previously carelessly grazing on fallen leaves, bounced away into the forest. Bogdan shook his head in disappointment, it was his third encounter with this sly creature, and just as before, his arrows never found their marks.

A soft whine sounded from behind, Svarli, the old husky, softly scattered to Bogdan's feet. A few years ago, Svarli would have aided his master, Stanislav, in traveling through the mountains. He was just a puppy when Stanislav took Bogdan as his apprentice. Throughout the years, the silver-furred dog often led his masters through the woods, eager to discover the forest. Now, the hound was a bit too old for that task. That was not to say Svarli lost his enthusiasm, no, he still perked with excitement every time Bogdan set out from the village. It was just that he could hardly outrun his masters anymore; instead, he merely sat with Bogdan, in ways similar to an old companion.

“You feeling cold boy?” Bogdan reached down and petted Svarli, whom responded with quizzing look. It was a sign urging for return, for Svarli had, and still have a keen sense for danger. “Let's go back home, you deserve a good meal at the Solstice.”
Now
The tavern buzzed with joy of the festival, and Svarli was happily waggling his tail beside Bogdan's chair. In the distance, Chiduka was telling a fairy tale to whoever would listen. For a brief second, he thought about her and Vasily, whom he saw earlier with his daughter. It was common for men and women of his age to marry, if not already having children. In fact, many of Bogdan's childhood friends married at his age. His work in the village distanced him from finding romance, a task he simply never concerned himself with until last year. In his travel to the foot of the mountains, he had taken interest in a girl of the town. Unfortunately, her father was rumored to have connections to the Tsar's family, a village folk such as Bogdan would most likely be the last one on the girl's mind.

Sighing briefly, Bogdan withdrew himself from the scene. He would not end up heir-less like Chiduka, maybe, just maybe, he will court the girl on his next trading trip. For now, he moved himself near a table of chanting men. They were watching Adrian, once again demonstrating his immense capacity for holding liquor. Bogdan smiled at the group, despite not often interacting with Adrian, he was someone Bogdan liked, and to an extent, a friend. Just as he neared Adrian's table, a terrifying scream and an unnatural aura of darkness swept by the door.

“Everyone into the tavern!” Someone shouted above the crowd. All of a sudden, Viktor was harrowing children inside. David and Viktor was abruptly in front of Bogdan, and the entire tavern seemed to have exploded in chaos.

“Adrian, David, Viktor. What is happening?”
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by Kraft
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Old Pavel smoked his old wooden pipe. He always did after a successful hunt.

“Another bountiful day, gentleman.” From out the deep forested bushiness of his grey beard came his voice, husky and weather-weary. Pavel wasn't much to talk, most of the experienced hunters weren't ones to talk, but when Pavel did speak, it was the voice of the forest. Older than what they knew, older than what they wondered and older than what they even dared to asked. Even Petya's father remembered Pavel with his grey beard and old wooden pipe.

“Old Pavel wasn't born,” he heard his father's voice, it was one of the few memories he had and could remember with strong recollection, the rest were faded and distorted; and his mother, Petya remembered nothing. “He was a tree and one day, he decided he wanted to walk, and thus, old Pavel came to our village.” The young Petya Vukašina took to this story as gospel, the young Petyr had always wanted to be cheeky and enquire old Pavel himself if this was true, but he had always been too scared. The young Petya also wanted to be sneaky and lift up his beard to see if he did hide bird nests underneath, but he had always been too scared.

The elder Petya Vukašina was less susceptible to these tall tales, old Pavel knew these woods better than any other living man, that much was true. He knew the animals and their calls, their tracks, right even down to their scent on the cool wind. But he had been no tree. Still, the elder Petya Vukašina was still too unwilling to ask him if the old man was indeed a tree, even in jest.

“And you, lad, you're turning into quite the archer.” The hunt had produced eight rabbits and four deer, a small in contrast to what they could usually track down, but the village was already stocked with an adequate amount and this would be the last hunt until the next full moon. The largest of the females attached to sled had been Petya's kill. It had, admittedly, been an easy kill. She had been grazing in the open and the wind was against her, Petya had been perched upon a tree and so all he had to do was wait. It had been a clean kill, a quick kill. She fell instantly, the arrow finding its resting place beyond the creature's left ear, following deep into the cranium.

Most hunters talk of aiming for the heart and lungs, a perfectly viable option but deers didn't always go down immediately and the last thing a hunter wanted was a wounded deer running through the forest panicking and spooking the other deer and animals. A head shot provided the perfect opportunity to drop the animal where it stood with very little meat last in the process. The downside was being good enough to hit a target so small.

“Here, lad.” old Pavel offered his old wooden pipe, Petya had memories of the first time he had accepted an offer from old Pavel to take a smoke from his pipe after he had made his first kill. A mixture of herbs and charcoal, It was a strong taste that caused him to wince and retreat from this oddity that lingered in his mouth. Out of respect, Petya accepted. The taste, still the same. This time, however, he did a finer job to stop himself from recoiling from the taste and sputter the smoke back up. “Thank you,” Petya said, though his face betrayed his true thoughts. Old Pavel laughed. “You will get used to it lad. Trust me.” The old man gave a strong squeeze on his shoulder, “Come, let us set for the village. The hour grows late and a storm approaches.”

The village had not been too far from their hunting grounds, but the sudden onset of snow had made their trek seem more daunting. They had always been used to the snow, it was his people's way to survive the harshest of conditions, but this storm bought with it an anger.

Fignya,” one of the hunters in the party tripped, and rose amidst a flurry of white dotting his fur coating. He cursed once as he steadied himself, and cursed again, aiming his colourful insults directed at the storm overhead. The more they walked, the heavier the snow became, the more worn their legs grew. Petya breathed through panted breaths. If he could see his face, he'd no doubt be red faced. They had been in storms before, it had snowed heavily before but never like this. “Should we had not seen the lights of the village by now?” One hunter shouted from the back. They had lost track of time an hour or so ago, the sun had been low in the sky when they set off but they had always returned in time before the moon dawned in full glory. The storm had blanketed the sky in a grim shade of grey and soon it was dark, unable to tell if the night had came or if the storm had robbed them of the last remaining light. But they had made this journey several times before, even if they could not fully make out their surroundings, instinct told them they would reach home soon. Petya thought of his niece for a momentary second, he saw her sat before a fire and he heard of voice, “What animals did you see today, dyadya?” He would certainly see a lot of animals running around in the forests, deers, bucks, rabbits and hares, winter foxes and sometimes when he ventured near to the rivers, he'd see otters. She asked on more than one occasion if she could accompany him on his hunts, her eyes full of wonder and hope, “When you're older,” he would always tell her, something he always heard as a child. In what he didn't understand back in his youth, he understood now. In her admiration for the small critters of the woods, the last thing he wanted to introduce little Antonina to was the carcass of a fresh hunt.

His thoughts turned to his brother; it was odd, it was a worried thought. Petya didn't worry too much for his brother, he didn't feel he had to, he had Antonina, never ventured into danger. Certainly, Vasily would worry over Petya. His brother had long hoped Petya would find a love for the art of carpentry, however, it had been the craftsmanship of the bow that led Petya to take up the art of hunting. much to his brother's vexation. But here, as he marched through the pitch blackness before him and an unending pile of white below, Petya found himself worrying about his brother.

“Lights!” Dmitri, the hunter who found himself face first within the snow earlier, exclaimed – followed by a collected sigh amongst the gathering of hunters and an exchange of easy laughter as the comforting sight of their village, their home, lay within reach. Their comfort did not last long as a wave of fear crashed over them.

Petya saw it, all the hunters had saw it. To be a hunter, to spend hours embedded deep in the woods, amongst the trees and the bushes, you attune yourself to both look and listen better than most. You breath slowly and you linked with the world around you and all must survive on is your sense. A hunter's sight rarely lied, yet, before them. Shadows moved.

And the world screamed.

It seemed all too natural, in hand and arrow ready to notch; Petya had readied himself, as did many of the other hunters. “What is this?” some muttered, Petya, like the others, had no words to say. They simply watched as shadows trickled down into the village and listened as shrieks flew on the wind. Eyes turned to old Pavel.

“Get to the village,” he told them and stupid they all felt. The old man was dumbfounded that they would even need to seek his wisdom on the matter. He had already galloped several meters ahead before the others even began to make headway through the snow and the storm, Petya watched old Pavel as he seemed to glide over the snow where the other's struggled and tripped, picked themselves up and would struggle and trip once more. The hunt had been left behind.

The hunters arrived home amidst a great fear and to face an enemy unsure as to whom it would be. “Find your families.” Old Pavel ordered, “your arrows and blades will do no good here.”

Vasily, the voice in his mind; “Vasily!” He called out.

The village had never felt as large as it did this night, he dashed, bow still in hand and arrow ready – despite old Pavel's advice – he dashed looking for what remained of his family. The cries and screams grew louder and the shadows began to ate all light, he passed faces he knew as they ran in the opposite direction, etched blurred faces of fear took hold inside of him as Petya ran onwards towards the darkness.

“Vasily!” Petya, almost silently, expressed. “Vasily!” This time crying out to his elder brother. Had Petya been strong enough, he would of carried both his brother and who he discovered in his arms to be blind Nadeen. Petya asked no questions, but followed. Relived that his brother was safe.

Questions would come later.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by MelonHead
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All around him chaos reigned, the contrast of an evening of intense merrymaking with the sudden terrifying events which had transpired causing many to enter a stunned stupor. Adrian was one of these people so effected, and even as David shook him roughly into some semblance of conscious thought a creaking permeated the air. Shutters had been quickly drawn over windows, but the cracking pressure of glass beginning to succumb to outside forces was evident for all of the frightened villagers to hear. Meanwhile, Viktor turned to consider Bogdan’s question, but despair and confusion was evident in his face even before he uttered the words many were feeling.

“I don’t know… it seems as if the world is ending!” Viktor cried, and then dropped his head in shame of his own outburst. Adrian roused himself suddenly, somehow his brother’s panic had brought him to his senses and he looked around wildly, taking in the scene. Most of the people had retreated back into the tavern, taking solace around the hearth, as if the flickering lights of the flame would protect them from the unnatural darkness enveloping the town. Adrian had to admit this seemed like the reasonable course of action himself, as the windows were focused on the front of the building, as was the door.

“Grigory, Anton get over here!” Adrian said suddenly, directing his question at the farmhand and his younger brother respectively, who were lurking just away from the main group.” Once assembled he looked at the men and fewer women around him, all adults, not quite ready to give into fear. “I saw something out in that darkness.” Adrian explained quickly, his eyes haunted with the memory. “We’ve got to barricade the doors and windows as best we can, Lord knows if it will do any good but we’ve got to try and keep what’s out there from getting in.” For a moment his intoxication was forgotten, as any good man could dispel the more debilitating effects of inebriation when a worthy cause presented itself.

David nodded in approval, larger and older than most assembled he was happy to have a physical task to take on. “Let’s do it.” He said, and as if the silent affirmation of most in the crowd was not sufficient to sway them, the door creaked alarmingly and a scratching at one of the windows caused Adrian to visibly pale.

The people who agreed with the plan outweighed the minority of selfless or lazy souls who were against blocking up the only entrance. Tables were upturned and pushed up against windows, and the heavy oak round-table that usually filled the room was pushed in front of the door, holding it shut with its significant weight. Even as they quickly worked the people inside whimpered at the sounds echoing from the darkness, and all the while the fires of the hearth dimmed, bringing the fearful darkness ever closer.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by Lillian Thorne
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The darkness roiled and rolled, pouring down the mountain and over the village. Where it landed, things died. It was the longest night of the year, as such the village had been lit with bonfires, lanterns, luxurious candles. All the light meant to ward off the night, to welcome back the light. Because of this all the denizens of the village were awake, not just the two footed. As a result all the villagers, two or four footed, were party to the terror of the hungry darkness that descended.

Animals in their barns screamed and then ceased in the most horrible abruptness. The silence of their passing was not long. Soon enough another would join in the unnatural chorus, singing their death with clarity that only added to the terror. Screams, squalls, squeals all filled the night alongside chittering and scratching noises that bypassed the ears and went right to one’s bones. Wet ripping sounds, slurping and deep the deep snapping of bones breaking added to the horrific music. Worst of all were the human screams that joined in, these songs lingered longer than those of the animals though they ended with the same abruptness.

For a moment, for an eternity the village was encased in darkness as large things thudded against the windows and doors of the sturdily build cottages. Scratching and scrambling filled the chimneys as small things of indeterminate shape and size began to pour down the chimneys, black as the soot that coated the stones, past the flames and into the homes where people gathered. There they swarmed.

Even as it swallowed the village the darkness kept on roiling and rolling, moving so that just as the leading edge hit the front of the village the part first effected by the darkness was freed from it. The bonfires still burned, the lanterns and candles still flickered and danced. They still sent their light up to welcome back the sun. But the eyes that lay open in horror would not see another day. In a matter of a moment the blackness came and went, rolling down the mountain, dispersing as it went, taking with it all the hungry things it had brought, both large and small. In its wake it left a swath of destruction, a village broken.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by Igraine
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'No Tristen, I don't think she's all right. Not at all - and I don't think we are either... '

Vasily thought those words as he looked to Tristen, not much more than an outlined figured and a familiar voice in the unnaturally seething blackness - but of course he did not speak them. He swallowed the hard lump of rising panic in his throat, and quickly jerked his head to Nadeen's cottage door. "Not good at all Tristen - get the door man, be quick about it!"

He clutched the frail, bird-like form of Blind Nadeen to his chest, stumbling into the small, tidy cottage, easing the old woman onto the edge of her bed before he whirled about, back to the door.

Petya...

"Tristen, stay with Nadeen. Please. I'll... I'll be right back... "

The dark beyond the threshold had eyes, shining crimson and malevolent and oh-so-greedy. There were fangs too, row upon row of razor sharp teeth as long and wicked as knives that flashed in the darkness behind wide, hungry smiles. Claws of black ice tick tick ticked along rock and stone and board, rustled in the thatch above his head as Vasily braced himself in the door. He hissed a single deep breath to steady his heart before he hurtled back into the ravenous, rapacious maelstrom for his little brother -

"Vasily!"

He could have wept like a child with relief. The sound of his little brother's worried shout washed over Vasily, radiating a perfect warmth like the comfort of the fire in a winter hearth. But there was not a second left to savor his happiness. Vasily heard his name again, and he quickly waved his brother out of the darkness, snatching at his arm and pulling him into the cottage, into safety, he could only pray.

And at this moment, this one good moment left to them? For now it was enough that he could wrap his arms around Petya, pull his brother close and savor that blessed living warmth. In this moment, all the long, difficult years of misunderstandings and missed communications simply never happened, and Vasily hugged his baby brother to him with a desperate embrace, thanking all the gods and kind spirits that surely looked over them still. Reluctantly, Vasily tore himself from Petya, looking to his brother's face as if he might say something, though nothing but breath passed his parted lips. Vasily found every word that came to mind inadequate to the moment, and so he said none. This was fine, truly - it was not as if Vasily could trust his voice wouldn't crack with tears anyway.

It was then that the storm of living darkness truly struck Adishi...

All the demons and devils, imps and unnatural abominations that lived in the black miasma were let loose, skittering over rooftops and down chimneys not properly protected by a hearth fire. They came through crevices and cracks, poorly repaired roofs and cracked windows, and Vasily pulled Nadeen to him where she sat on the bed, wrapping his arms around her and holding her tightly as if his mere flesh might be the armor to hers.

The screams though... It was the screams of so many people Vasily had known all his life, people he loved and people he did not particularly care for in the least, all the people great and small and good and bad in their small, beloved world in Adishi: it was these screams, long and wailing, bloody and gurgling and, time and time again, cut off all to swiftly and finally, that would haunt Vasily's nightmares for all the years of his life.

And though it seemed a small eternity in this unimaginable hell of darkness and blood and agony, the black tide truly rolled through the village almost as quickly as it had arrived, leaving in its wake a silence that was almost as deafening as the horrifying sounds of carnage had been, only seconds before. Vasily released Nadeen, whispering a comforting word to her as he stood to his booted feet. He looked to Tristen, to Petya, and felt that nasty twist in his gut, knowing he had not a damn thing to tell them, no more reasons than they, about what had happened this holy solstice night - or what was yet to come.

Vasily shook his head helplessly, stunned - until, that is, the name of the one person who gave his world any meaning seared his thoughts. "Antonina... " he said softly, "She's with Nadejda... Sergei... She is... " Deep blue eyes widened in terror.

Vasily ran.

He saw nothing as he flew from Nadeen's cottage: nothing about him, nothing to the right or to the left, nothing of the horrors visited on Adishi or its denizens, two-legged or four-legged. All he ever saw before him was the cottage of his in-laws as he sprinted heedless in the night, running to their door. Vasily slammed into it with his shoulder, forgetting the door had been barred, and he hissed with the pain and cursed. It was then that Vasily heard that faint, unmistakable sounds, just the other side of these timbers. High and full of fear, over and over again, his daughter shrieked with terror.

"Open the door! SERGEI! NADEJDA! Open the DOOR!" he shouted, pounding at the solid timber planks while his daughter screamed within. There was not a single thought going through his head but to get to Antonina. Vasily's blood ran cold, every last hair on his body crawling with terror as he slammed his foot, hard, with all the desperate strength of man whose entire life, whose entire reason to wake in the morning, or take a single breath, lay on the other side of these planks.

Again, and then again and again, Vasily kicked with the power of a madman, the wood splintering beneath his assault until finally the door gave way with a crack, and he rushed in..

There had been no fire in the hearth. There had been no time to light one, and the candle had fallen at the threshold. Sergei lay on the floor beside Nadejda and Antonina, the crimson-spattered pair huddled into the far corner of their cottage. Untold numbers of deep lacerations flayed the skin along his back, his buttocks and legs, deep cuts that sliced through flesh and even bone as the big man wrapped his wife and granddaughter in the shield of his own body. But it wasn't the unspeakable incisions all along the back of his body that killed the great man, but a single gash from ear-to-ear, inches deep, across his neck...

Vasily bared his teeth, groaning softly in the back of his throat at the sight. Sergei's wide, sightless eyes told him the man was far beyond any help he could bring, but Vasily's long strides ate the distance to grandmother and granddaughter. He pulled them both to him from the ground, steering then toward the now-splintered door and further from the nightmare visited in this good and loving house.

Vasily reassured himself that none of the blood on his little girl was hers, and gently he pulled her close. Tears welled up in his eyes as he clutched her to him, and he gave not a good damn that this time they fell, shining streams of relief and despair spilling down his cheeks to disappear into his beard. Antonina's screams quieted only when she buried her tear-streaked face in her father's shoulder, great shuddering gasps wracking the entirety of her little body as she moaned for her Poppop, over and over. Vasily pulled Nadejda close, holding her to him as well, doing his best to shield both ladies from the blood-soaked horror that their village had become.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by AmongHeroes
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CLANG

TING-TING

CLANG

TING-TING

Pavel’s hammer sang against the iron and the anvil, working the length of red-hot metal he held, with an almost songlike quality. Across the be-freckled skin of the man’s face, the fiery glow of the forge set the beads of sweat to gleaming like fiery diamonds. His eyes, narrowed as they were into a focused glare down to his work, shone like polished cherry wood disks—alight with much more than the reflection of the burning embers stoked by the bellows.

The ache of muscle and bone registered only distantly to Pavel as his hammer paused with a final strike against the iron. With his tongs, Pavel turned the length of metal onto its edge, and inspected it with a singular, critical eye. His mouth turned up at the edges in the barest of smiles.

Satisfied with his handiwork, Pavel plunged the length of iron into a barrel of cool water. The hiss and sizzle of the scalding metal was a pleasant finale to the hard and ringing symphony of his hammer strikes. The young blacksmith let out a fulfilled breath of air, and it immediately turned to a white cloud of steam. It was only then that Pavel perceived the frigid evening air that forced its way through the open walls of the smithy, fighting away the hardwood-fueled heat of the forge’s belly. Another small smile crept to his lips, and a shiver thrilled down the length of his toned back.

To Pavel, there was nothing quite so satisfying an endeavor as hard, honest work. It drove the cold from the bones, and filled the heart and soul with a calmness of purpose like nothing else could. With this thought upon his mind, Pavel removed the length of iron from its bath, and set it carefully next to its pair on a woolen cloth beside the water basin. With another few hours of crafting, the iron strips would find themselves pinned together into a set of hinges for the new grain barn. The hinges would be balanced as best as fallible human eyes and hands could achieve, and only a modicum of grease would be required to allow the heavy timber doors to close with but a gentle push. Anything less would not be acceptable to Pavel. A trait he had inherited from his father.

Father…

The smile that had found his face vanished instantly. It had happened this way for years, the sneaking pariah of what had become of his father would suddenly pop into his mind like a soap bubble. The thought would burst, and expel the pleasantness of the moment like nothing else could. No matter how hard Pavel worked to keep his mind free and clear of such burdens, the eternal tempest of past and present would find the shores of his thoughts.

Pavel looked up, staring beneath the eaves of the smithy, and up the small hill towards the handsome cottage just a stone’s throw away. The squat structure was built of warm and stout timber, with a high pitched roof covered with long planks of cedar. The roof was invisible now, as it was blanketed with a thick crop of snow, but Pavel could see the planks in his minds-eye even now. He had helped lay those planks, when he was but sixteen, and he knew every inch of their surface. His father had clucked and chided over him patiently as the pair had milled and planed the lumber themselves. The elder Alekseyev had looked upon his son with a proud eye as he offered the occasional tip in the placement of nails, or the most efficient way to grip the hammer.

In a rare moment, the memory teased a pleasant warmth to Pavel’s heart. The current squalid, drunken existence of the Mikhail Andreyevich Alekseyev was forgotten to the son for the most fleeting of instances, replaced instead by the man he had known as a boy. The man his father had once been. The man that Pavel wanted to be now.

As if called forth by the memory, a faint yet distinct voice carried on the wind through the walls of the cottage, and out into the frigid air. The emotion fell from Pavel’s face as the sound met his ears. Though faint with distance, the words were all too familiar to Pavel, and he had no need to strain to understand them.

“Alla!” The voice came softly, fading in and out with the wind. “Why did it have to be Alla!?”

Pavel’s features masked themselves into a neutral expression that could have been carved of granite. Turning to the forge, he deftly withdrew another length of iron that had lain heating in the bed of coals. With his tongs he placed the iron upon the anvil. In his right hand, the hammer rose, and set poised to strike.

Again the voice called, this time with more anguished force. “ALLA!”

Pavel struck the red-hot iron. The blow sent sparks flying from the metal.

“Alla!”

His next blow rang out louder than the first. The one that followed was even louder, and louder still. The hammer strikes crescendoed and quickened, elevating the sound in the smithy until all that could be heard once more was the symphony of hammer, anvil, and iron.

CLANG

TING-TING

CLANG

TING-TING

* * * * *


Later that night.


The scream from within the village breached even the thunderous reports of Pavel’s hammer. Looking up, Pavel set his work aside and stared down towards the heart of Adishi where the sound had emanated. From his vantage point, set above, and some distance from the center of town, Pavel could not see who had cried out. He had no time to look long.

Like a roiling, living, inky tide of baleful scorn, the black wave that the cry had heralded crashed against smithy and cottage. Choking, chattering cascades of horror enveloped Pavel, thrusting him back. His head fell downward, his equilibrium thrown by the force of the wave, and the sheer terror that chilled his veins. The anvil, unmoved and stoic amidst the roil, broke Pavel’s fall, and his grip upon consciousness was lost in a singular, petrifying, and blood-curdling cry.

* * *


Pavel’s eyes opened slowly. He blinked, his mind trudging up into the realm of reality with painful sluggishness. His vision came back just as slow, finally focusing upon the stone form of the forge just scant inches away from where he lay. Turning his head, Pavel was met first by a shock of pain from the base of his skull, then secondly by the sight of the anvil that seemed to tower above him.

In that long eternal moment upon with his back upon the floor, realization found Pavel at last. In spite of the nauseating spike in the back of his head, he sat bolt upright and gasped with fresh dread. Around him, things were eerily quiet and ordinary. Looking about, he saw that his tools, as well as the fire in the forge seemed undisturbed. The iron band that he had been working was yet still steaming upon the earthen floor, and the night air beyond the open walls of the smithy seemed no more ominous than any other countless winter night.

Using the anvil to help lever himself upward, Pavel stood to uncertain legs. A wave of dizziness washed over him, and threatened to bring him back to the ground. With gritted teeth and tightly shut eyes, Pavel forced the wave away, and willed himself to hold his ground. It was after this herculean effort that fresh cries came to his ears. These were not screams of warning or terror, as the one that had preceded the obsidian wave had been. No, these were cries of anguish and of his disbelief. The import of these voices were not lost upon Pavel, and his gaze snapped upward to the cottage just beyond.

Father…

As fast as his continued bursts of nausea would permit, Pavel set out up the worn path towards the cottage. Slipping and stumbling upon the fresh snow, he made the threshold, and shouldered the door open. The warmth of the cottage’s interior washed over him, as the fire in the large hearth danced with a virility that belied the darkness that had just swept across Adishi.

“Father?” Pavel said hoarsely, stepping inside.

His eyes scanned the room, alighting upon the heavy oaken table and its chairs, the stone hearth, the sideboard and cupboard, the pot rack. As with the smithy, all seemed undisturbed, and as regular as he had left it hours before. Save for one—his father’s chair was empty.

Set close beside the fire, covered with blankets of wool and fur, was a well-worn rocking-chair. The chair was a fixture that was occupied by Pavel’s father almost ceaselessly. Save for the occasion the man had to relieve himself, or when he was forced outside the walls of the cottage to retrieve more drink, Mikhail Alekseyev availed himself of that singular seat. But now, it sat conspicuously free of its usual burden.

A sense of dread prickled the hair upon the back of Pavel’s neck. With eyes wide, and his breath coming in short, hushed gasps, he began to step around the table. Every new move forward brought more of the floor and chair into view, and with that view came an ever sinking pit at the bottom of his stomach.

With a silent gasp, Pavel froze. His last step had culminated in the vision he had feared to find, but somehow knew existed the moment consciousness had returned to him after his fall. There, lying on his side, his face partially lit by the flames of the fire was the body of Mikhail. What little life had still glimmered in the hopeless man’s eyes, Pavel could clearly see existed no more. His father was crumpled upon the wooden floor, as if in death he had fallen from the seat of his rocking-chair, and had moved in one last effort with his dying body.

Pavel collapsed to his knees. There, just out of reach to his father’s dead, outstretched fingers, was the bright, clear, and shining glisten of a bottle. The liquid inside did not make itself even to the neck of the sideways bottle, and none of the spirit had been spilled upon the ground. Too much of it had been consumed. Mikhail Andreyevich Alekseyev had used his final moments to reach for the only thing that he had cherished since his beloved Alla had been taken from him.

Pavel stared in sorrowful disdain. His face turned to scowl, which then contorted into a mask of some unknown emotion. Tears welled at the corner of the man’s cherry wood eyes, and for the first time in over a decade, Pavel wept.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by Numerica
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Chiduka's grasp on Tjasa's arm brought her out of her frozen disbelief. This felt too real to be a dream... She had to get to Papa. He would make everything better. He always had always kept her safe before, surely he would not fail her now. A part of her knew that her father was only a man, a good man, but still just a man, no more equipped to deal with impossible nightmares than any other man, but she refused to acknowledge it. Papa had always meant security, he had driven the monsters under her bed away as a child, and held her while she cried after Mama passed. She allowed Chiduka to pull her through the snow towards the tavern, moving as fast as she could.

As they drew closer to where she knew the tavern should be, Tjasa looked for the light spilling out of the windows. She realized that they weren't going to make it before the darkness overcame them, and struggled to move even faster. Terror making her clumsy, she tripped and fell headfirst into a deep snow bank, breaking Chiduka's grip on her arm. Before she could even get her breath back, she heard the cacophony of screams, animal and otherwise, begin. Instinctively, she huddled deeper in to the snow, curling herself into a tight ball.

She managed to keep herself from screaming, but only just. She prayed to her ancestors that the monstrous owners of the malicious eyes she had seen in the darkness would not see her. She begged her mother especially not to abandon her, to keep her out of harm's way. After what seemed an eternity, the screams slowed, then stopped all together. She didn't move for another eternity, unsure if the evil spirits were truly gone, or if they had simply run out of things to kill.

When she did finally poke her head out of the snow, she was horrified by what she saw. She glanced to where Chiduka had last been, and after assuring herself that she was not among the dead, she stood and ran the rest of the way to the tavern, desperate for the comfort of her Papa's arms around her. She struggled to push open the door, and almost threw up when she realized that it was an body, made unrecognizable by the lack of a face, that was holding the door closed. She forced herself not to stop tears freezing on her face, and managed to open the door enough to squeeze in. "Papa?" she called, looking around, finally recognizing the winter cloak she had lovingly embroidered for him, near the fireplace. She hurriedly made her way over, pushing past the well meaning arms of Radislav, one of her father's few close friends, as he reached to stop her.

"Papa?" she said, hoping against hope that she would get a response. When none was forthcoming, she knelt and turned him over. She screamed, realizing that were his heart should be, there was only a gaping hole.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by Mokley
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This is a dream. This is a dream. This is a dream.

The snow was pure. It glimmered in the moonlight and danced in the frozen wind; it was soft under their running feet and clung on their eyelashes. It was familiar. It was silent. Chiudka loved the snow. This was her thought while she ran, stumbling, through the glistening road: she loved the snow.

The hot, roiling, gnashing darkness tumbled over dear Oksana and Oskar's house, over little Antonina's home, over the old hall where Chiudka had learned to sing, over the water well she'd fallen into as a child, over Bronislava's grave, over the untouched snow. The shadow swelled and snarled and screeched and swallowed all of it whole.

This is a dream.

Tjasa's arm was suddenly gone from her grip, and panic caught in Chiudka's throat. The dark thundered and howled and flashed its thousands of teeth and eyes just above them. She threw herself over her niece and covered them both with snow and there she hid, still as stone, silently calling her sister's spirit for protection and strength while bones cracked and flesh slurped and voices she'd never hear again screamed.

She didn't realize that silence had fallen until the first sob of despair rang out. Snow fell in clumps from Chiudka's back while she stood stiffly -- and Tjasa was already out and running for the tavern. "Thank you, Broni," she whispered, grateful, to Bronislava's spirit, and tears stung her frozen face. Tjasa was safe. But the village...

The snow was destroyed and speckled with red. All those years that the village had escaped famine, disease, disaster and war -- all that luck and good health while the world around them suffered -- had been paid for in a night.

Tjasa's voice rose up among the mourners.

Chiudka approached the tavern in a hollow daze. She pushed a shoulder into the barricaded door, and paused there to look down, sorrowful, at her bereft niece. She laid a hand on the girl's head, but there was nothing she could say. Tjasa would know that her father's spirit surrounded her now. Chiudka caught a glimpse of her own father and mother in the shadow of the vacant hearth, huddled around one another against the far wall and unmoving. She took a slow breath. "Okay," she whispered to herself. She had helped draw her friends, her loved ones, her family all of them, inside the tavern for safety. Their blood stuck on the soles of her shoes. The tears burned. "Okay. Okay." She swallowed. "Okay. Help me, Papa. Help me, Mama. Stay with me, dear sister, I'm sorry. I'm sorry. Mama, Papa, Bronislava," she breathed a mantra, calling upon her parents while their bodies were still hot, and the snow outside muffled the wails of bereavement.

"Tjasa..." Chiudka's voice failed her. She cleared her throat, took a breath, and tried again. "Tjasa, please, I need you now. We all ... Tjasa, do you remember where Grandpa Kisel keeps his bag?" She meant the big satchel that Chiudka's father, the healer, always brought to the sick and the injured. "Tjasa, I need that bag. Can you fetch it and bring it to me?" Her voice was steady -- but for the first time since Blind Nadeen's warning, Chiudka was shaking.

She stepped forward into the tavern, and she addressed Adrian and Bogdan, of the few who remained alive therein, with a voice that was as frightened as it was certain: "Please help me find and gather the survivors. Check for a pulse, hold a mirror to their mouths," as she spoke, her speech tumbled quicker out of her mouth, and she began to kneel among the fallen, her skirts quickly wicking up the blood. "If we can save them, we will save them. Help me save them."

She lifted the eyelid of a beloved young girl, hoping with all her heart for a sign of life, while knowing there would be none. "I can save them," she whispered, and she touched another, pressed her fingers into his artery, lowered her ear to his mouth to listen for breath. And the more she touched them, the more she realized that this was not a dream. Tears streamed down her face, she scraped them away with an arm, she tried another, and another ... and another.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by ButtsnBalls
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“We've got to barricade the doors and windows” Bogdan heard from Adrian. Following his command, patrons of the tavern began to shove tables, chairs and everything with enough weight at the points of entrance. Bogdan was quick to pitch in, as he and another man lifted a wooden bench to the back door and stacked several chairs above it.

“You know Bogdan,” the man stopped and questioned. “wasn't there another group of hunters earlier? Why are they not with you?”

“They set out earlier than me,” Bogdan recounted. He heard old Pavel and his sortie setting our earlier; a group of experienced hunters, most of whom were superior archers and trackers than himself. Originally, it was Bogdan's intent to follow along. However, Svarli was beset by an upset stomach this morning. Bogdan never went out of Adishi without Svarli...

Svarli.

“Wait,” Bogdan suddenly remembered. While he and Adrian's friends busied themselves with barricading, Svarli was nowhere in sight. “Have you seen Svarli, my hound? He was under...”

The sound reached his ears at that moment. Horrifying screams, screeches of lives being extinguished from both human and animals. Without hesitation, Bogdan took off back to the main tavern room. He sprinted as fast he could, vaulting over a table and dashing between a group of surprised patrons.

Svarli.

The unmistakable shape of a husky curled in the corner, soft whimpers came from its mouth. Somehow, a deep dread underneath him told Bogdan that Svarli was another victim of the curse. He knelt beside Svarli, holding the husky's trembling head in his lap. No, this could not happen, Bogdan pleaded. He knew Svarli was growing weaker by the minute, and most terrifying of all, there was nothing he could do to stop it.

“No, no, no.” For the first time in seven years, Bogdan cried. Tears streamed from his eyes down to the floor, where his shaking hands held the lifeless body of his most loyal companion.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by Kraft
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The last time Petya had embraced his brother, Anna, his brother's wife, had just passed from this world and onto the next. Petya, in his adolescence youth of unwarranted attention of such things, had generally avoided his brother's loving affections. Yet he squeezed back and his brother pulled him in, a tight, enclosed, embrace. Ignoring that at this moment, Petya was perhaps the most well-armed of the gathering within the cottage, Vasily took hold with protective intent.

There were no words between the brothers as Vasily finally tore away, Petya himself unsure of what to say, what was there to say beyond riddles and questions of what was happening around them. Petya counted the faces of who was in their company, Tristen, Vasily, blind Nadeen, “Where's Antonina?” His question was drowned out by the next wave of screams. Evil things hunted in the village, Petya fell back against a wall and listened, bow and arrow, for what it was worth, ready to protect against what was outside all the while, feeling like a boy again. He could tell you the sound of the doe deer upon a winter's field or the call of the little egret within the trees, but these creatures he did not know. They were in the streets, upon the roofs, creaking movements like skinless animals, that scratched and gnawed and moved like ants. And still, the screams, cold scared screams of those who were not protected enough and those still outdoors, silenced by choking gurgles and bodies nearby settling in the snow.

Petya looked to his elder sibling who had Nadeen protected, Petya took up cover in the far corner of the room, nearest to the small window. Of what he could afford to see, he saw nothing, but he felt it. His eyes may of betrayed him on this occasion, but he felt perverse eyes peer into their shelter, their one last defence before moving onto the next cottage, and then the next. Breaking through the smallest cranny which once, only winter's wind could enter through.

Then, silence.

Silence.

“Vasily,” Petya said with a whisper, worried that his words would call the darkness back again. The brothers exchange a look, then, "Antonina... " he said softly, "She's with Nadejda... Sergei... She is... "

Petya watched as his brother flew from their shelter and Petya gave chase.

The village had always seemed so small, even as a youth, Petya felt how small the village was. All the faces and all the families who knew each other, he would stand upon the foot of the hill which led towards the hunting grounds and stare down at Adishi, able to say he lived in what house and what cottage, who worked in the smithy, the tavern, and who was who as they walked upon the roads. Yet now, in the darkness, it felt very large, very daunting, he knew where Nadejda and Sergei made their home, just like he did with everyone, but something wouldn't carry him along the paths he knew. He was last, running amidst a dark road with small embers in the distance that grew closer and closer, “Petya!”

“Dmitri?” Petya sounded surprised. Dmitri, with torch in hand, was flanked by Alexander and Pavlichenko, Zinoviy, Vladislav and Juho, it had seemed most of his fellow hunters had survived. They were all dirty, bloody and bore some scarring, across the brow of Dmitri was a large gash and a river of crimson that dirtied the side of his face. “You're hurt?”

“Petya,” Dmitri's voice was heavy. In the light of their burning torches, Petya saw their faces, remorseful and detached looks, “The old man did not make it.”

Petya pushed his aside the others to the front of the gathering where, in all too picturesque fashion, lay a fur coat in a halo of a light. In the outlying darkness were specks of blood that trickled towards where the body lay. Despite reservation, Petya lifted up the coat and caught the sleeping face of old Pavel, his old beard knotted with thick crimson.

“We should head to the tavern and gather any survivors,” Dmitri, came, taking sudden charge of the party. “That was the old man's last order. We don't know if these things may return.”

“Survivors,” Petya said, his words forming into mist and escaping into the night. It was an odd word, it weighed heavily on his tongue, but it was true, they had always been survivors in theory, they tended to their own fields, hunted and fished their own lands, they were ignored by the world and proud of it, “Nobody could survive our ways.” But now, it seemed a grim title to claim as Petya covered the face of old Pavel, letting the old tree finally rest.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by Numerica
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Tjasa barely noticed when Chiudka placed a hand on her head. She stared at her father's body, as if she believed if she waited long enough she would wake up and this would all have been a horrible nightmare. As the immediate shock began to wear off, she began to weep, whispering "Please, just let me wake up. I'll be good, I promise! I'll do all my chores and I won't yell at Papa when he tracks soot into the cottage, and I won't wander so far in the woods any more, and I'll mind my own business and everything else I'm supposed to do....Please!"

She instinctively looked up when Chiudka called her name. Chiudka's request confused her at first. Why would Chiudka need Grandpa Kisel's bag more than Grandpa Kisel? After a moment, she understood, and nodded. She shakily stood up, realizing as she did so that the cloak she had worked so hard on was now ruined by blood stains. The second after she thought that she wondered what was wrong with her. Papa was ... was dead, Grandpa and Grandma probably were as well, and she was worried about a stupid cloak?

Tjasa took off running, telling herself that if she hurried, maybe Chiudka could help at least some people. She tried not to notice anything on the way to Grandpa Kisel's cottage. She didn't know enough to help anyone, but Chiudka knew more then she did. Maybe with Grandpa's bag Chiudka would be able to save someone. She didn't even really look at anything in the cottage, but went straight to the cupboard across from the hearth. She heard her Grandfather explaining that some of the herbs lost their potency if they got too warm, and closed her eyes for a moment, thanking him for the reminder that the dead were not truly gone.

Tjasa opened her eyes, and made sure the bag was tightly closed before turning around and heading for the tavern as fast as she could fight her way through the snow.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by MelonHead
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If only they had been able to keep the darkness where it belonged… outside. The barricades should have been enough, Adrian was sure his plan should have worked… he should have saved them.

The fire flickered out as the great mass of darkness enveloped the tavern, only for a moment, but it was enough. The screams echoed from within, and Adrian felt a claw rend his shoulder, he screamed in agony. Then, it passed, and only the unlucky survivors were left with the devastation within. Bogdan rocked over the body of his stricken dog, and Adrian stared blindly at the slumped figure, caught as the window cracked and the shutters tore from their fixings. David’s upper body was marked with hundreds of minor lacerations his face a barely recognisable mess. The oldest farm-hand, a man Adrian had known from birth almost, was dead. He couldn’t do a thing. His brothers were around him, Viktor was helping a quietly crying girl, her mother another poor unfortunate. Anton, his younger brother, was helping Grigory to one of the few undamaged chairs, his leg a mess of blood, his face contorted with pain. Adrian felt tears stain his cheek as he pulled at David, tried to shake him back to life.

“What have we done… to deserve this.” He muttered incoherently, even as one of the luckier men who had not suffered an immediate loss pulled frantically at the barricaded doors. Adrian had not the strength to stop him, though he was not yet ready to believe the danger had passed. The doors swung open, allowing other unfortunates to enter or leave the tavern at will if they wished, and the man himself ran out into the darkness, seeking loved ones.

Adrian’s will hardened then, there was something he had forgotten in the throes of his own immediate and shaking grief. His mother and Father, alone in the darkness, in the farm. What was it his father had said to him before he was to leave for the festivities?

Adrian, fetch some firewood boy, we’ll be lucky if we’re not taken by the cold come morning.

Adrian blanched, his face whitened, he had forgot.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by Lillian Thorne
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“Stupid, Stupid girl.” She said in a voice tight with pain and condemnation the minute she could find enough breath to speak.

“Stupid, foolish girl. You prove them right at every turn.”

Oskana Stanislava did not weep, she would not for all that she had never wanted to more than she did then. She did not weep because to weep was to give in fully to the pain. She was stubborn to a fault and never backed down, not even when she was wrong. This pain was not worse than the time she’d fallen out of the tree her Father had told her not to climb. It did not hurt as bad as the broken nose she’d gotten when she’d got into a fight with those three idiot brother’s Vadim, Yefim and Makar when she’d found them cornering Oskar. It did not hurt as badly as Oskar’s words after that had, when he’d called her unnatural and told her she’d shamed him.

What did he know? He was the unnatural one, so quiet, so secretive and so disinterested in anything interesting. He could go hunting if he wanted, He could learn to shoot. He could go down the mountain with Bogdan if he wanted. He could see some of the world. But no, he stayed where he was, jumping when Papa said to, making pretty things and mooning over books. Did he not realize how easy he had it? But no, he tossed away all the things she wanted and then called her unnatural?!

She made herself stand and if she had to use the strength of the tree to do so, she did without shame. No one was around to see her weakness, nothing was around to see. She was alone. The Animals that hadn’t hid themselves fast enough were either dead or dying, their cries filling the night with a piteous chorus. The rest were sensible enough to stay hidden.

Collecting herself she looked down the length of her lean body and surveyed the damage. She’d been lucky she supposed, only the small things had gotten a hold of her. She shuddered to think of the larger, blackened shapes she’d seen moving in the roiling darkness that had passed over her. Small lacerations covered her from head to toe it seemed, they had not been stopped by her stolen clothing. Oskar’s second best coat hadn’t stopped them from slicing into her. Most were not deep, but she could feel a few that were. She could feel the cooling blood running down her flesh, soaking into her borrowed pants, filling her boots one drop at a time.

A thousand small hurts. Not so different from every day, she chided herself as she forced herself to take one step, then another. What had made her take to the trees, hoping to track the hunters and prove herself to them? What had made her think that this time she would manage it? What made her think that this this time old Pavel would acknowledge her, despite her Father’s orders not too?

“Idiot.” She said and took another step. Each one was an agony but each one was also penance, the sort the crows her brother loved so well spoke of every time they came. She would pay penance well for this foolishness. She wasn’t certain how long her trip took, time seemed to lose importance as she focused on simply getting back to the village. She did not think about what she would find there, she did not think about what she would say or how she would explain. She just had to get there.

She hung limply against a tree, her arms wrapped around the trunk as she leaned and collected her strength. The village couldn’t be that far now. She heard voices and turned her head towards the sounds. Was that a cluster of men she saw? Catching just a few voices and recognizing them even if she didn’t understand what they said she almost sobbed in relief. She’d tracked them, the hunters. She’d finally managed it. Idiot.

“Dimitri… Pavel… Petya?” She called. She would not ask for help, but she could not hide the need for it in her voice.
Hidden 10 yrs ago Post by Lillian Thorne
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An eternity, an instant, Oskar was not certain which it had been, but the howling ended more suddenly than it began. With his second story view he could see that it was not that the blackness had ended, simply that it had moved on. For a moment he watched it rolling down the mountain, vanishing into the blackness of the night beyond the bonfires that still lit up Adishi. He shook his head, not wanting to look away from the blackness simply because he would then have to see what lay in the village. He would have to see what he’d wrought.

There had been screaming when the things were upon them, horrible screams and sounds that would haunt his dreams for the rest of his life. There were new screams now, these were worse somehow. It was the screams of those who lived, those who had lost someone dear to them. Oksana? His Father… Where were they? That thought galvanized him when the screams of others had locked his knees. They were all the family he had.

He didn’t remember crossing his small room. He didn’t remember ripping open the door. He didn’t remember running down the stairs. But he sure as hell remembered seeing the large shape at the bottom of the stairs, just inside the door that led to the common room where the sounds of merrymaking were not replaced with those of weeping and grief.

“Father.” He said and the true weight of his actions seemed to land fully on his slender shoulders. “Father.” He said again and took the last few steps down. The air here was rich with the scent of blood, the same scent that filled the air after a funeral sacrifice, the same scent that filled the air while the hunters cleaned and dressed their kills. There was no companionable laughter to take the edge off of the stench, only a backdrop of weeping and screams.

“My boy…”

The words were so soft Oskar thought he might have imagined them, had not that great head with the enviable beard not turned towards him showing the two bloody bits of ruin where eyes should have been.

“Father.” He said again, helplessly, uselessly. Just like he did everything. He lowered himself to his knees and felt with every heartbeat every single time he’d been a disappointment to this man.

“I’m here.” He said and his voice cracked with grief and guilt. “I am here Father.”

“Good. That’s good.” He coughed, a wet sound not unlike the ripping, tearing sounds that had filled the unnatural night not so long ago. His hands, his big, capable hands reached out, not to cuff Oskar like usual, but to find comfort. How could he not wrap his own slender hands around the rough, bloody ones that needed him, for once?

“The witch.” His father said when he caught his breath. “Something happened to her.”

Guilt choked Oskar’s voice, cowardice too. For a moment he simply nodded before the wet, red mess on his father’s face made him find his voice again.

“I’m sorry Father.” He managed.

“You must go see. Go up the mountain and see. Oskar, promise me you will go see. She is the answer, she will be the fix.”

Another round of wet coughing and dark thick blood began to flick and foam at the lips framed so perfectly by the great, dark beard.

“Go to her. Find your mother…”

And then he was still. Oskar stared, Oskar shook and then, dropping the lifeless hands Oskar pressed his hands to his ears and screamed.
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