She
thought herself lucky. Even though her adviser droned on and on and on, she regarded him as the most capable attaché
she had ever had, but there were times when she wanted to pick up a chair and
bust it across his teeth. Mind you, if
she did that, she would have to break in a new attaché, and that was much, much
worse.
“Has the regional council made a
decision yet?” She interrupted his droning’s.
He readjusted his glasses as he
spoke. “No. I believe it will be at least a month before
they agree on a resolution.”
She looked out at the sunny
afternoon without. She would go for a
swim later she decided. It was warm
enough, and the water would still be cold.
She hated swimming in warm water.
You were supposed to cringe when you first entered the water. It was a way to remind one of one’s
insignificance next to something as immense as the ocean. She just hoped she wouldn’t run into another
shark. She turned her attention back to
her attaché as he recited profit and loss figures, annual expenditure, harvest
yields, product sales and other things that were important to her.
“What has happened with the summer
residence?” She asked.
He readjusted his glasses yet again
as he replied. She found the nervous
habit annoying and distracting. “The
lower three fields have been sown; the new agricultural laboratory is installed
and operational; our dairy facilities have been expanded to accommodate the new
cheese production house; lamb yield was fifty percent higher than expected; and,
the village has been extended to accommodate the ever increasing employment
force.”
She breathed in deeply. The next question was certain to make him
drop his glasses altogether. “And how
many more death threats have I received.”
Surprising her, he put the documents
in his lap to one side and looked at her squarely. “Three in the last month.” His tone was rock steady.
She rose and, over his objection,
strode to the window. She was tired of
hiding. “Is there progress in the
investigation?” She asked quietly.
From behind she heard him sigh with
resignation. “I’m afraid not.”
She turned back to face him. “Please request that they redouble their
efforts, I would prefer not to leave
The Pack leaderless.”
He rose and bowed deeply. “As you wish, Baroness.”
She nodded in deference to his
respect. He was a droning, boring bag of
hot air, but his devotion to her and his duties had been above reproach for the
last two centuries. She was grateful for
him and the sense of continuity he projected.
In those rare times she was honest with herself, she was actually quite
fond of the man. She motioned for the
two of them to walk. It was lunchtime
and she was starving. They had just
stepped out of the parlour and into the hall when a gun-shot rang out. From beside her she heard a short sharp crack
and saw her attaché fall to the floor, blood flowing from a wound to his knee. The cracking had probably been the bullet
breaking the poor man’s knee cap.
She looked back to see a figure
dressed entirely in black with a balaclava over his head. For a moment she was amused at the absurdity
of his dress given it was inner city Melbourne, Australia in the twenty-first century and
not Moscow, Russia during the Cold War. He fired
at her but she was prepared. She easily
evaded the bullet and sprinted forward to knock the gun out of his hand. What she was not prepared for was the
strength with which he returned the blows she was raining down on him. This was no average assassin; this was one of
their allies’ kind. With that, she
flashed into her Human/Lycan hybrid form and called on all her speed and
strength.
She extended her claws and raked
them across her attackers’ chest, drawing first blood. He screamed and vaulted over her and ran on
through the house. She followed him,
startled servants and Embassy staff quickly running out of the way of the
pursuit. One thing she realised was that
he was a professional. He was beginning
the turn into corners even before he had got to them. He was clearly familiar with the Embassy’s
floor plan. She didn’t care; she dug the
claws of her feet into the carpet and pushed off with a huge burst of
strength. She leapt up and came down on
the back of her quarry and the two went crashing to the floor. He kicked her off and valiantly attempted to
get back up, but she was just too fast, as all of her kind was.
She leapt onto his chest and tore
the balaclava from his face. She was not
familiar with him, but that didn’t matter.
She wanted information, not a reunion.
With her weight on him, and his arms pinned to the floor by her feet,
she leant forward. He looked up into her
face, which was a mix of human and wolf.
Her teeth were longer and her incisors were three inch fangs that could
rip out a man’s throat with little effort.
Her ears, normally somewhat pointed, were now extended by about four
inches. Her eyebrows were now much
fuller and her jaw line was much sharper and somewhat distended. Sharp, silver eyes dared him to break her
gaze. For anyone it would be a sight of
horror, but her quarry appeared not to be scared easily. Even now, futile as it was, he tried to break
free.
She casually slapped him across the
face. It got his attention.
“Stop moving around. You know you can’t shift me.” She informed him almost nonchalantly. “You will tell me why am I being targeted and
by whom?”
He spat at her, his own elongated
incisors making that a somewhat messy task.
She backhanded him across the face, this time drawing blood.
“That will get you nowhere even
faster.” She drawled. “Who?”
His struggles ceased and his
breathing began to slow. He stared at
her with undisguised loathing. “The Red
Council.”
She rolled her eyes and backhanded
him even harder the third time. His eyes
momentarily glazed over with the pain.
She was many times stronger than him.
“What are they?” She asked quietly.
He replied through a slight
slur. “The Red Council has tired of its
association with the mongrels of history.
They will kill you, and then The Pack.”
As he finished, two of her most
trusted security staff entered the room.
She motioned for them to take him away.
“Interrogate him, thoroughly.”
She instructed.
As they left, she shifted back to
her human form. She would need to call a
meeting. Thankfully, she did it so
rarely that she was always obeyed when she did.
Just because one had influence did not mean one was permitted to abuse
it.
Not even Karolinya, the Baroness
Holfensteim; Marquise of Tolseichner; Viscomtess of Laschavia, and
Regent-Hereditary of Wallachia.
The above excerpt is from a work written by Damien Timms and is protected by International Copyright lodged in Australia and the USA and may not be reproduced in part or whole without the written permission of the author.
2 comments:
Damien,
What can I say, as usual good work on both of the new excerpts. Curiosity grows naturally - a good thing of course. Is this in an order or random? Looking forward to some back story.
At the moment it's random.
There will be an overview eventually.
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