The
Wraith
~Tales
of Ithiria~
Written
by: April Wahlin
Edited
by: Talese Shertzer
~
The
crunching of dried leaves underfoot was rhythmic, slow, and relaxed.
The target was unaware of being watched. It was going to be an easy
kill; so easy it hardly seemed worth it, but the money was right.
The
Wraith waited with rapidly diminishing patience and realized that his
mid-afternoon whiskey was wearing off. He checked his bag for another
flask. No luck. Cursing his tolerance, the scruffy predator leaned
against a thick branch and waited. His tree vantage point provided
excellent camouflage and an easy view of his mark.
The
Wraith slowly filled his lungs and listened. There was a lot one
could learn by simply listening. He could tell if someone was
careless or cunning, if someone had a limp or a hunched back, even
the very mood they were in, if he only listened
hard enough. The man, if he could still classify himself as such,
could hear everything.
Not just the chirping of birds and scurrying of marmots in the
foliage. He could hear wolves stalking deer in the distance, fish
splashing in the stream a mile away, even the whispered creaking of
the trees. It was easy for him, no more strenuous than breathing.
Ignoring it was the difficult part. If he hadn’t learned to drown
it out years ago, he might have gone mad. He could hear every
creature in a five mile radius, but not a one of them could hear him.
It was vital he stay calm while tracking and hunting; if his emotions
flared they would sense him, as sure as they could sense a forest
fire.
He
groaned as he listened to the man’s steps: his prey was in no hurry
and would not be in striking distance for some time. With little else
to do, the Wraith took his knife and began flaying an apple, red from
white. He hated waiting.
Idleness
was the Wraith's greatest enemy, static moments tempted bad memories.
Memories of death, cities in ruin, rivers of blood, lovers engulfed
in flame. They were all visions of another life—of a man formerly
known as McTrave. He had been a good man, a man who operated by the
codes of honor and valor. A King among men. That man would be
disgusted by what he saw now: a two-bit assassin for hire known
simply as The Wraith. A name given to him by those who had survived
his brief company. He was a horrifying apparition amongst the world.
McTrave had died long ago, shriveled and disappeared after seeing
everything he cared for reduced to ashes. All that remained were
nightmares in a hollow shell.
After
spending years hunting ghosts, the man had given up. The old McTrave
thought he could find a way to bring her back, but he'd traveled from
one end of Ithiria to the other and found nothing. Each devil he
encountered was naught but a waste of time. Any Mystic worth their
salt knew better than to consort with him, they could sense what he
was. They knew to be in his presence was to tempt death. Years had
passed and McTrave was no closer to getting her back than he was to
finding a way to rid himself of this cursed existence.
With nothing left to
live for, McTrave had set to wandering, taking jobs where he could
and doing the one thing at which he excelled: destroying life. He
took no joy in his endeavors and was sure to be quick in closing his
deals. No need to cause the slaughtered more suffering than
necessary. His exploits had become legend. His terrible deeds were
even used to frighten children away from of the Woods. Well, at least
he'd achieved some good, he thought as he tossed his apple core,
pulled a rolled cigar from his bag, and lit it with the spontaneous
flick of a finger. What did he care if he was reduced to being a
story book monster? Even the followers of The One True God were
starting to adopt his misdeeds into their lore. How he hated the
pious contradictions of this new Religion. He'd spent years setting
fire to their temples, but every time he destroyed one, two more
sprung up in its place like some terrible hydra. The bastards.
The
Wraith pulled on his cigar, instantly reducing it to ash. Annoyed, he
sent the burnt remnants fluttering to the ground. Yet another cigar
ruined by his infernal temper. He leaned back, trying to get his mind
in the game, and heard footsteps approach. To work, he thought as he
cleaned the blade of his hunting knife.
He
waited as the target leisurely passed beneath his hiding place in the
foliage. The man was actually whistling. So jolly, so carefree. For a
moment, the Wraith almost hated to strike, but he was in the perfect
position. It was keep it clean now or let it get messy later.
With
a step, the Wraith plummeted to the forest floor. In an instant it
was done. His prey continued a pace before realizing anything was
wrong. Curiously, he wiped the blood from his throat and looked at
his hand. He turned to the Wraith questioningly, then gurgled as he
fell to the forest floor.
“There
are worse deaths,” he told the dead man as though it might be some
comfort.
Just
then, McTrave caught a draft on the wind. He smelled something
familiar, something he had smelled on the man who hired him. Glaring
down, the Wraith used a foot to roll the body onto its back. The man,
his prey,was no more than a boy, his facial hair just starting
to grow. He couldn’t be older than seventeen. What could a boy of
his age have done to deserve death?
Then
he saw it: the hair, the eyes, they were the same as the client who
had hired him. It wasn't until then that he understood what he had
been paid to do. He was accustomed to dealing with murderers,
cheating husbands, thieving employees, revenge, an eye for an eye,
the whole bit, but not this. Why hadn’t he seen it before? He
steadied himself on the trunk of a tree. What did he care that he had
been paid to kill the man’s own son? Why should that bother him?
It
was the boy. He had been so happy, so unsuspecting, no idea his own
blood wanted him dead. The Wraith didn’t kill children, despite
popular belief. He was a monster, but even he had his limitations.
“His
father would only have hired someone else,” came a creaky voice
from behind him.
He
didn’t need to turn to know who, or rather what, was was
there. “I should have asked. I know better than to go into a job
blind,” he replied, staring bitterly at the dead boy.
Had
he grown so tired of it all that he could let something like this
slip?
“You’re
burning it,” the voice called.
The
Wraith looked up to the smoldering hand print he'd made in the tree.
“Malachi,
we need to speak,” the voice, little more than the crackling of
burning leaves and smoldering wood, groaned.
“Do
not call me that. I am not Malachi.” The Wraith pulled his
hand from the burning bark, cleaned the boy’s blood from his knife,
and turned to the thing behind him. The little creature was more rock
than man: a three-foot hunk of smoldering volcanic magma with stubby
appendages and the vague suggestion of facial features. “We have
nothing to discuss. Now go away.” His growl was both demanding and
pleading.
“No,
Malachi,” it replied. “This time you must hear me. Things are
happening, things you must be part of.”
“Why?
Why can’t you find someone else?” The creature of fire had
followed him since he could remember, but it had always left when
commanded, without question. Why the hell wouldn’t it leave now?
“There
is no one else,” the little man replied. “This is not the
existence you wish. Why pursue what you hate?”
“This
is all that is left of me.”
The
creature looked saddened but did not back down. “I will help you,”
its voice was gravel in a tumbler. “I know what plagues you. I see
it. I feel it.”
“You
do not know my pain!” the Wraith hissed and the leaves beneath his
feet began to smolder.
“Not
as you do, no. I see you are tormented. I know you do not want others
to suffer.” The Wraith did not argue. “Follow me. I will hide the
memories, but that is the limit of my ability.”
The
Wraith looked at him fully for the first time. “You can make them
go away?”
The
little man hesitated. “It is dangerous. I cannot block one memory
alone. I can take all, or nothing. Eventually the effect will ware.
When it does, there is no telling what will happen, but it will be
painful.”
“I
do not care,” he replied darkly. “Anything is better than this
torment.”
The
little man sighed heavily. “As you wish.”
“What
do you need me to do?” His mouth was a set line, his eyes blazed.
“You
must guard an item vital to the existence of this world. I will show
you.”
The
creature started into the woods, moving faster than its stature
should allow.
The
Wraith followed. He did not want his memories, any of them. He did
not care for this life and would do anything to be rid of his past.
It seemed amazing that the little man of fire had been the key to his
salvation all along. He knew the creature would not have agreed had
it not been desperate for his help, but he did not care, nor did he
care enough to consider the danger. If McTrave could not find her,
could not die to join her, than the Wraith must forget her. If that
meant forgetting everything, so be it.
The
End
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