That was all it took for a blue ring of light to illuminate around them, flapping both their cloaks – his black, hers white – as a burst of magical energy pushed between them. A double circle with ancient runic symbols between the circle’s lines was cast upon the ground, lines forming inside the circle to create a six-pointed star.
Gasps rang out from the crowd as the woman tried to pry her hand away from his in shock, but he held firm until the protection ward was completed. Their union solidified as the magical contractor and offered sacrifice who gave their blood.
He wondered if the warmth he could feel from her through his glove was real, or a figment of his imagination.
He retracted his hand once it was done and severed the contact between them. Her hand flew to her chest as she cupped where his claw had cut into her skin.
“The protection ward is complete. Let us leave,” he demanded with a sense of mild urgency.
He strode forward to be behind her so she would begin to walk towards the gates, unwilling to remain in this human town any longer than necessary.
“Is that why you did that?” she whispered up to him as he pushed his hand on the small of her back when her feet seemed stuck to the dirt.
She stumbled forward before she began to move, Orpheus following with his palm remaining over her back and waist.
“Yes. Blood must be paid, and I cannot use my own.”
Gilford quickly rushed forward to walk beside them with a slight distance as Orpheus steered the confused woman between his ethereal companions.
“Thank you, oh great Duskwalker, for your protection. We hope you will be satisfied with your decision and bless us again in the future.”
It is hardly a blessing. His ward would disappear in ten years, and when he created a new one in a different town, the Demons from the new protected village would rush to this one when it was weakened to feed. Chaos would ensue.
Orpheus turned his face towards him, staring with annoyance hidden behind the fact he couldn’t make a single expression. He disliked the overly courteous way the humans spoke to him since he knew it was a fa?ade to appease him. Like that would be enough to stop him from ruining the town with claw and fang.
If I did not desire this void to be filled, then I surely would have.
They were afraid of him, hated him. They were disgusted by him, and he had no intention of building any form of trust when he very much may one day decide to become a malevolent spirit against them.
Ten years between each human did little to satisfy his hunger, and as the years grew and he got older, living on mind-numbingly endlessly, the more tired he was becoming of it.
How much longer will it be? An ongoing question without a matching answer. How much longer would it be before he found a human who wanted to be his companion?
Once he left the village, he finally dug out the hardened mud from his nose hole so he could be more comfortable and smell properly.
He turned his bony skull to the top of the blonde-headed woman in front of him. Perhaps this one will be different. If not, Orpheus would be back on the surface world to hunt for a new ‘bride’。
He rarely had confidence in his stolen humans.
Reia ran after the Duskwalker as they made their way outside the village gates, which were promptly closed behind them with a definitive thud.
She paused, turning to face the wooden gates that had kept her trapped inside the town for years, feeling a sense of foreboding and yet… freedom. Well, a kind of freedom. It was more like she’d traded one prison for another. Just how tightly will he hold the chains of my metaphorical shackle?
For now, she needed to come up with a plan to get away.
As she stared at the gates, she wondered what she should do now.
“Hey!” she yelled when one of the wolves gave a terrifying, heart-sputtering bark at her ankles.
Her skin crawled at the harrowing sound. It sounded like the final crying bark of a dying animal, and vaguely like the mixture of a bear and dog at the same time.
“Get away from me!” she yelped at the other one when it snapped its jaws at her other ankle. She attempted to shoo it away by kicking her leg out.
It jumped back before the side of her poorly dressed foot could hit in the face.
“Unless you want them to bite, I would follow,” the Duskwalker said calmly, his cloak hem flapping in the distance.
It opened into an arch around his legs when the wind caught it from his long strides.
With a groan, Reia shuffled after him, surprised by how far he’d gotten in such a short amount of time. He had already reached the forest on the other side of the large, mostly snow-covered clearing that separated the town from the woodlands that surrounded it.