DEATHLANDS Neutron Solstice By James Axler

Flames and water.

Flames and water.

Flames.

“Come on,” snapped the young man, jerking the witch from her reverie.

She was pulled into a room and was left alone. She coughed, trying to establish the size and shape, but the sound was muffled, as if large drapes hung everywhere.

“The ritual of the bird, Mama?”

He used the Creole French that she always used in her ceremonies, rather than the anglicized patois of his followers. His voice was deep and resonant with a pleasant amiable tone to it.

“It was bad, Baron. Real bad.”

“Everyone leave us.”

There was a scurrying of feet and a jostling in the doorway as if too many people were trying to get out at once. The woman heard the door close, then silence broken only by a susurrating creaking sound. Leather and wood and metal moving against each other, under tension.

Mama Minuit had never seen Baron Tourment. She had spoken many times with him. Even made love with him. Her body knew his dimensions. All of them.

She knew that he was immensely tall. Three inches over seven feet. Though his fingers were like steel, his body was weak, the knees and hips unable to fully support him. To compensate, he wore a clumsy exoskeleton of steel struts and bindings around his lower torso and legs. His hair was short and curly. She also recalled that his penis was about twice ordinary size, thick and long, like the forearm of a young child. He had thrust remorselessly between her wide-spread thighs, tearing her, so that blood gushed over her legs and belly.

She had never conceived. Nor had any woman he had ever serviced. But she knew that the baron still lived in hope of a son and heir.

“I heard of the red-wing slain. Falling into the flames to perish.”

On an impulse she dropped to her knees, conscious of him looming over her. She could smell his body. Musk and soap, mingling.

“I have never seen the like.”

“You put out the eyes?”

“Yes.”

“And released it clean? It was not harmed? The wings were unbroken?”

“Yes, lord.”

His breathing was slow and steady. The only other sound the woman heard was the surf of her own blood seething through her ears.

“It fell to the fire and was consumed?”

“I have never”

“You have said that.”

“Forgive me, lord.”

“For what? There was a ripple in our world, and you asked for the strangers’ ritual to be performed. It has been done before. And it will be done again. This time, it went I am disappointed, madame, I am very disappointed.”

“It proves what I had said. There had been signs before. When there has been a great tide or the earth has shaken. The insects, the snakes and the birds. All behave in”

His hand touched her face, and she stopped speaking. The middle finger of his right hand touched her jaw, beneath the left ear. His spatulate thumb probed under the right ear.

“Tell me once, woman. Why?”

The palm of his hand was across her lips, pushing them against her broken teeth. There was the warmth of sweet blood in her mouth.

“There are strangers come. But they are not as we are. Not Cajuns. Not your men or women. Not the wolf’s-head renegades from the other side of the town. They have come from nowhere.”

“And the signs are bad?”

“As bad as can be. Never”

The finger and thumb began to tighten, making the cartilage pop under the skin. The woman moaned, but the grip was inexorable.

“That is all? There is nothing more you can say to aid me with these strangers?”

She desperately racked her mind for something that might satisfy Baron Tourment, might spare her from his cold anger.

“No?” he said, voice as soft as the touch of a butterfly’s wing. “Then you have failed me.”

The hand closed on her jaw, squeezing, the nails digging into her flesh. The skin burst under the pressure, and the woman tried to scream for mercy. But already her windpipe was clamped shut. First the left side of her jaw was dislocated, then the right joint cracked apart. She tried to bite the black hand, but it was too tight against her lip.

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