Healing Wounds in Arabarb
By Charles Matthias

After breaking through the castle wall, Pharcellus pushed Machias and Quoddy out before him before leaping into night air, spreading his wings, and hoping. The mage who could only be Gmork was far more powerful than he anticipated. Lacerations dashed across his neck and chest, most of them bleeding. The cold air was a welcome relief, and then the emptiness of space as he left the sundry earth below had never felt grander.

His wings caught the air and he beat as hard as he could, quickly moving around to the east to escape the mage's new vantage. Machias and Quoddy followed him up into the air and over the dense forest that encroached the castle's eastern flank. Pharcellus chanced a look back at the castle, but no more volleys were forthcoming.

He did not allow himself any emblem of relief despite his pain. Lindsey was still trapped in that castle and in the hands of Gmork. Had the mage not been standing next to the boy, he would have reduced him to cinders. Now he just had to hope Lindsey would not be harmed for another day or two until they could make a more permanent assault on the castle.

Pharcellus flapped his wings and drove ever eastward along the river, until quite suddenly the stars in the sky began to spin. And then fists pummeled his side as he crashed into an open meadow overlooking the river. He blinked as everything began to clear and craning his neck backward, inspected his wings. There were a few smaller cuts along the edges, but no breaks and no large tears. He'd still be able to fly.

The two sea birds landed on the ground before him and the gull squawked, "Are you okay, Pharcellus?"

He gently ran one hand down his neck and chest and grimaced as it stung in more places than he cared to count. "I will be," he replied in his booming voice. He lowered his neck so that his snout was no further from the ground than his two friends. "I need to rest a short while, but we cannot stay here long. Gmork will be sure to come for us, and we are not far enough from his castle to be safe."

Machias started trembling and he squawked in sudden anguish. "That monster has taken our brother! Lubec! Lubec wanted Gmork to kill and eat him. And us! Oh Pharcellus! What do we do? What do we do to save him?"

The dragon looked down at the puffin and the gull with deep sympathy. He knew how deeply a brother loved his siblings. "We will save Lubec and Lindsey both," he assured them, though he didn't feel at all certain of it. "But we need to calm down. While I rest a bit, you tell me what happened. Then, I want the both of you to go back to Fjellvidden and find Elizabaeg. Vysterag is one of Gmork's servants and he is to be kept out of all councils. You need to warn her of that. You can find her in the old mill at the western edge of town."

Quoddy bobbed his head up and down. "We will. What about you?"

Pharcellus lowered his neck to the ground and let it rest against soft grasses. Already his wounds felt soothed. "I am going to lead Gmork and his men as far from here as I can. But I will return tomorrow. Now tell me what Gmork did. All of it. But be not afraid. We'll rescue them. We will."

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Gmork knew there was little time to waste. But that infernal dragon had murdered his youngest pup, one he could ill-afford to lose. It was time to take a risk with his latest acquisition. There was still some humanity there and that could be used against him. So he, with Sergeant Cajudy, the fool who had unwittingly brought the dragon into the castle, carried the body of his slain pup down to the dungeons.

His three other pups were waiting in Yajgaj's antechamber and their eyes filled with horror at the sight of their youngest brother's head in Gmork's arms. "Say nothing now," Gmork admonished them with a snap and a growl. "Follow me and do as I bid you, my children."

His three children, each with different degrees and expressions of their beastly nature showing, but all with furred, pointed ears and long tails, followed him silently. Of them all only his eldest child had a furless tail, an affectation that normally amused Gmork but little could amuse him at the moment.

For one moment, he'd felt certain that the boy Andrig was finally going to beg for mercy for his friends. For one moment Gmork had been confidant the extent and location of the Resistance would be revealed. But that hideous fit of clarity undid all of the conditioning Gmork had peppered him with, and then before he could reclaim his work that dragon had appeared. They would soon hunt him down to finish him off, but first Gmork was going to give his latest child a chance to become truly his.

He hoped his gamble worked. Otherwise, it would be another month or two before he'd be able to break his humanity completely.

Gmork used the keys he took from Yajgaj to open the door to the dungeons, and then pressed it aside with one shoulder. Cajudy followed him down carrying the back end of his slain pup, obviously a little nervous at being surrounded by his entire pack. The other three came down almost snipping at his heels as they crouched as low as they could.

With a twirl of his fingers, Gmork summoned witchlights to bring a soft light to the darkness. A trio of ghostly spheres giving off a febrile blue light wandered and danced like fireflies until they settled near his latest acquisition. Gmork, Cajudy, and the three pups followed in their wake.

At the pup's feet was a denuded and cracked bone. Crouching on all fours with head hung low and tongue panting was his newest child. Gmork felt a tremor of delight at seeing the bone completely stripped. His little pup had eaten all of the meat even though he thought it man-flesh. And there, as promised, twitching at the base of his spine through his black cloak was a small tail covered in patchy black fur. His arms ended in more paws than hands, though the thumbs were still present. His face distended into a snout, the jowls coated lightly in the same black fur which receded to gray along his ears and cheeks. His eyes were a rich golden hue that sparkled in the pale light.

When Gmork came within the circle of light, he lifted his head slightly, nudging the bone with the back of his fingers. "I ate it all, Father. I... I enjoyed it."

His pup's voice was uncertain, but hopeful, almost resigned. Some part of his resistance had given way; not all of it by any means. But each measure surrendered to Gmork further cemented his beastly nature and eroded the old human identity. But as he and Cajudy set the precious body of his slain pup on the ground, it took a great strain to bring a smile to his face. "I am glad, and proud of you my child."

His pup lifted his face further, and then he sniffed and realized that they weren't alone. The other three pups came around the circle and looked at him with ears lifted and tails straight. They sniffed curiously but said nothing. Cajudy backed away a few paces so that he fell into shadow but waited for orders. His pup's ears lifted and his tail lowered to press between his legs if only it were long enough. And then his ears lowered as his eyes became transfixed on the dead child.

"I am glad for you, my pup, but I am very sad. Your brother..." he stroked one paw down the bloody corpse's chest. "Your brother was slain... slain by a dragon." At this, he tilted his head back and began to howl in abject misery. The other three pups all sat on their haunches and did the same, howling a mournful dirge that made Cajudy shrink back further.

His newest pup stared and listened for several seconds, looking at the body and murmuring, "My brother? My brother is dead? No..." He repeated it three times before finally he succumbed to sorrow, tilted back his head and howled with the rest of them, his voice a plaintive cry of misery and loss. Their five voices twined in beastly harmony, cascading up and down in tone with mellifluous melancholy. When one ran out of breath, they lowered their snout, and then resumed the cry of anguish.

Gmork let this continue for a few minutes, and if he'd had time, would have let it persist for much longer. Every moment his new pup howled and wept as their kind did, he cemented himself further and further into their family. What was left of his humanity understood the importance and the solidarity that had to come through a family. That, combined with his clear willingness to obey his father and to love him just the same, proved that while he may not be one of them completely in body and soul, he was nevertheless one of them.

But was he ready to live among them and as one of them? Gmork now had but to test this.

He lowered his snout and walking on all fours, nudged his newest pup against the cheek, then bared his fangs to silence him. His pup lowered to his haunches and swallowed, ears lowered. Within him, Gmork could see the swirls of magical energy slackening. That was not what he wished to see.

"Your brother," Gmork said in a soft growl, "was murdered. Cruelly slain and the killer escaped our grasp." The weave of magic within him suddenly flared to life, drawing tighter and tighter around what Gmork suddenly saw was a clenched fist. It was still a human fist though. "This is a grave injustice, my child. Our family has been hurt and weakened by his murders. What must we do?"

His pup growled, a fire boiling in his golden eyes. "We must have recompense, Father!"

"Recompense?" Gmork asked. "What recompense? What can return a life?"

While Gmork's three other children watched, each nuzzling and stroking the body of their slain brother in turn, Gmork gently eased his will into that flow of magic, finding it open to him at last. It swirled about, a whirlpool of power and force, all directed into that closed fist. He had to stretch out like a shaft of iron beaten into a strip so thin and long that it was as fragile as glass, but he did touch that fist. And it hurt.

Gmork trembled but brushed his will along that fist, even as the swirl of energy inside his pup tightened further. But the fist, like everything else about a man, responded. Little flecks of fur sprang up, dark with gray mixed in. Even that little bit would be enough. With a gasp he pulled himself back and asked his pup again, "What recompense is there for a life?"

His pup growled, the fur on the back of his neck standing on end, the hair on his head thickening into a veritable mane. "Another life!"

"What would you do with that other life if it were in your jaws?"

"Tear it! Rip it! Eat it!" Spittle flew from his muzzle with each word.

"Even if it were man?"

He barked in a rage even more furious than Gmork had anticipated. "Especially man!"

With a flick of his wrist, Gmork severed the chains holding his pup to the dungeon floor. He then leaned back to give his new pup room and let one of his witchlights wander away from the other two until it found where Cajudy had hidden himself. The soldier had quietly inched toward the door to the dungeon, but still had another twelve feet to go.

Gmork whispered, into the growling beast's ear, "That man brought your brother's killer. He helped his killer reach into our home. What will you do?"

His newest pup leaped forward and bounded three steps on all fours after the suddenly fleeing Cajudy. He grabbed the man's backside with his jaws and spun him around. Then, rising into a crouch, he slashed with both forepaws at the man's chest and abdomen, his arms moving so quickly that Gmork couldn't follow them. Cajudy didn't even get a chance to scream before his chest, face, and belly were mere ruins of red gore and spray. The body didn't fall only because it hadn't had enough time to. By the time it reached the floor, his pup grasped what remained of the serrated head in his jaws and ripped it free, chewing and breaking the bones. Huge swaths of black and gray fur were smeared with blood in so fine a layer that they shimmered like fiery flames in the glow of the witchlights.

Gmork and the other pups loped to his side yipping and growling in welcome. Gmork barked to his child, who dutifully leaned back, almost completely a beast in form now. "Very good my son. But the one who killed your brother is still out there. Come and hunt with us. When we return we will feast on their remains."

His new pup grinned a red-jawed smile.

And in the distant reaches of the dungeon, Gmork could hear the sole remaining prisoner praying. His time would be soon enough. As the five beasts left the dungeons carrying their brother's body, the witchlights winked out, leaving him alone in the darkness with Cajudy's corpse.



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May He bless you and keep you in His grace and love,

Charles Matthias


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