username + link to partner’s entry: eel. + Ucanthandleme
fable name: Nora
prompt: [655 words]
“and then you sprinkle the ashes over the bones?”
Vincent sighed around the small urn he held in his mouth, and continued to let the ashes fall without dignifying his apprentice with an answer. had she been paying no attention in their studies? maybe we should be doing a spell to make her more attentive, he thought. it seems it may be more useful than any ghost I could ever conjure.
he set the urn down and stepped out of the circle, his chains clinking as he readjusted his wings. the moon chose that moment to peek out from behind the clouds, hanging low and red like the promise of blood.
“It’s…beautiful.” Nora looked up at him, her eyes shimmering with the moon’s red light. “so we start now?”
“as soon as the moon is fully visible.”
Nora shifted on her hooves, excited. she watched as the moonlight bathed the previously shaded ritual circle in red, causing the bones of the direwolf laid within to appear almost pink. Vincent had warned her against trying to summon the spirit of such a large beast for her first ritual, but she was sure she could control it. she’d make Vincent see. she’d make him proud.
the last few clouds slipped away from the moon.
“steel yourself,” Vincent said, his expression grave. if it weren’t for the white of his wings and the yellow of his eyes, he would be but a shadow.
Nora released a breath, and then started the chant Vincent had drilled into her head. she wouldn’t forget a word of it. not a single word.
her voice filled the clearing, soft and melodious, and Vincent’s joined it, his normal baritone sinking to a deeper bass.
the crickets fell silent. the wind picked up.
as their chanting grew in pitch, Nora couldn’t help but shiver. she swore she could hear drums in the distance, other voices chanting with theirs. Vincent, for his part, could pick out the faint soprano of his mentor, long since lost to the earth. one day, he supposed, when Nora taught her own apprentice the ways of the dead, she would hear his voice on the wind.
the materials sprinkled around the circle skittered towards the bones, creating tendons of tar and muscles of ash until the once-dead beast suddenly surged to its feet, its yellowing teeth snapping at the air, its eyes empty sockets of mist.
Nora’s breath escaped her. she’d done it.
The beast’s head slowly turned toward her.
“control it, Nora,” Vincent warned, but he sounded very far away.
Nora stared into its dead eyes, enraptured as it crept out of the circle and closer to her. it bared its fangs, its gums nothing but dirt, its ashy muscles coiling.
“no!” something dark slammed into the undead wolf as it sprang, scattering it back into ashes and bones. Nora snapped out of her trance and took a few startled steps away from Vincent, who was breathing hard. “control it,” he growled at her. he wasn’t going to lose his apprentice. “don’t let it control you.”
Nora looked back at the undead wolf, which had reassembled itself. it growled.
control it - yes. the beast stalked toward her. she didn’t back down, didn’t let its misty, empty eyes distract her. if she concentrated, she could feel the beast’s soul, could almost imagine herself in its body of ash and bone.
she closed her eyes. the snarling of the wolf got closer, and closer, and -
it barked. she cracked an eye open to see the wolf sitting with its head cocked to the side, its empty expression decidedly friendlier.
she’d done it. she’d actually done it!
she looked at Vincent, who gave her a short nod. she could almost swear she could see him wiping a relieved grin off of his face.
“good job,” he grunted, his voice gruff. “now let’s clean this up before anyone starts wondering where we are.”