Lycan Fallout (Book 2): Fall of Man (8 page)

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Authors: Mark Tufo

Tags: #werewolves

BOOK: Lycan Fallout (Book 2): Fall of Man
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Chapter Eleven – Mike Journal Entry 7

 

The pain was...bearable. I was finally good enough that I did not feel like someone was dragging electrical leads across my exposed brain. It was when I sat up that I realized I had a metal collar around my neck which had a thick chain attached to it and fastened to a wall. I could see this clearly enough due to the plethora of torches stationed throughout the room.

“What the fuck?” I was pulling on the metal links.

“Just hold on.”

“What is this shit?” I was yanking harder.

“Stop!” the person shouted. I didn’t do so until I saw the glint of steel.

“Okay, we’ll do this your way for a minute. What is going on?” I appeared calm on the outside, but inside I was thrumming like a live wire.

“My name is Mathieu. I have brought you to my home.”

I took a moment to look around. It was easy enough to see we were in some sort of large cement structure, other than that I couldn’t make out much detail. Mathieu had a small fire going, and I could not see much past it. The only true indication I had of size was the echoing of our speech as we talked. The cement part was easy enough to deduce considering the fact that my chain was anchored to that material.

“For what purpose?” I was looking at his crude bladed weapon. Simple, sure, but deadly, too.

“I was hunting when I saw the birds circling your location. I was not having any luck, so I decided to see what they had found. It has been a long time since I have witnessed a scene as gruesome as that. I was going to bury the dead when I heard the Lycan cry off in the distance. My first instinct was to run as far away as I could.”

“What changed your mind?”

“I saw you moving. Three Lycan dead and you still alive? I needed to hear that story.”

“You risked your life for a story?”

“I’m alone out here. A good story is all I have.”

“Why am I captive?”

“That’s for my protection, not yours.”

“What? You save me and then chain me up?”

“I put the gag in your mouth because I knew you were going to cry out when I moved you. What I wasn’t expecting was your teeth to mysteriously elongate. I saw that woman’s body—she was bloodless with no serious wound on her body.”

“You saw
that
and still decided to help me? How desperate for a story are you? And just as a point of contention, that was self-defense.”

“Draining her of blood was done to protect yourself?”

“Well, not that part
per se
. She attacked me after I killed the third Lycan. When I stopped her attack, I did what I had to do.”

“I stayed there longer than I should have. I didn’t know if I should risk everything to save you. For all I know, the Lycan could have been trying to rid the world of a scourge.”

“Oh, they tried.”

“You willingly admit to not be worthy of saving?”

I paused for a moment, careful to think out my next words. I didn’t know Mathieu; if I said something wrong, who knows, maybe he just swings his machete around and cuts my throat wide open. So I told him the truth.

“No, I am not. I have lived far too long. I have seen too much death, and I have been the cause of a fair amount of it. If there has ever been one worthy and ready to die it is I. I’ve done so much in this life, and I feel that I have accomplished so little. For every small gain I have made, I have lost two-fold. I want to die, Mathieu, but I’m afraid that this life just hasn’t finished with me yet.”

“I am not sure about your verbal defense strategy, Michael.”

“How do you know my name?” I asked suspiciously.

Mathieu actually smiled. It was the first time I’d seen that expression from him. “I’ve thought about putting the gag back on these last few hours. Every once in a while you would shout out, ‘I am Michael Talbot, motherfucker!’ ”

I felt heat rise to my face. “Sorry about that.”

“It is understandable after all you have been through. Can you tell me why I should not kill you, a creature I, until just recently, believed to be myth?”

“First and foremost, Mathieu, because you would fail.” I laughed, as he was taken aback at my brazenness. “I do not say this as a threat or to boast. I am not lying when I tell you that I am ready and willing to die. I also would not be lying if I told you that I have a survival instinct that is greater than my previous statement. I could simultaneously bend my neck back so you could get a better angle with your blade while with my hands reach out, twist the knife free, break your arm and then drive your own steel into your stomach. I do not even think I would be conscious of the fact that I had taken your life.”

Mathieu gulped hard.

“Now for the good news. I suppose. I was dragged into a war with the Lycan.”

“We are at war?”

“Don’t get out much I take it? They are becoming united under one leader who is hell-bent on world domination. He has destroyed a place called Harbor’s Town and almost destroyed Wheatonville…where I lost one of my last friends and kin.”

“Was that the Tommy you shouted out about?”

I nodded solemnly.

“I have heard of those settlements. The Lycan attacked there? That is very unlike them.”

“How much do you know about them?”

“Not as much as I would like, as it is hazardous to be around them. They are, or were, very similar to their wolf relations. They have small packs with a highly regulated hierarchy. They hunt as a team but generally only the weak and sick are their targets unless they are starving. Like any of us, they tend to avoid conflicts that could be injurious.”

“Oh, I can assure you that is not
my
standard operating procedure.” I pointed to my leg. “As for the Lycan, they are still pretty much chicken-shit. They are having werewolves do their bidding.”

“That’s a lie!” Mathieu shouted. He stood and stepped away from the fire.

“Why would I lie about that? Do I really need to make bigger monsters out of them? They change all the humans they can and then, once a month, let them loose so they can destroy everything in their path. If there is anything left at the end of the night, the Lycan come in to claim victory and finish everyone off. If there is still a viable defense, they run away like the little bitches that they are.” Mathieu was staring at me with what looked like some form of astonishment; aghast is maybe a better descriptor. Seemed like he should have been on a Broadway show the way he was over-emoting. “What, man? So maybe ‘bitches’ wasn’t the correct term.”

“Werewolves do NOT do the bidding of Lycan!” His face had gone an angry red. I was happy he wasn’t closer, or he would have coated me in a fair amount of spittle as he more spewed his words out than spoke them.

I was going to question his reaction when I really stopped to take in my immediate surroundings. How in the hell I’d missed it previously I would blame on my condition. I only had a heavy metal band around my neck; which, I think if I greased my head up, I could have slid through. Also attached to the wall were four more heavy chains, two down by the floor and two more about waist high. There were deep grooves scraped into the concrete all over the wall. I turned slowly back around. Mathieu’s chest was heaving, anger having slipped away to sadness.

“You’re a werewolf.” I was going to phrase it as a question, but I was as sure about that as I could be without actually seeing him turn.

“I am.”

“Yet you want to kill me for what I am? Why don’t you turn that blade on yourself if you’re that quick to judge? At least, for good or bad, I’m in control of my actions.” I don’t think I could have hit him any harder if I physically punched him.

He sat down almost as violently as he’d stood. “I killed my entire family.”

What does one say to that? I’m sorry? That’s like giving antacids for a brain tumor. I didn’t say anything to him, but I couldn’t help thinking it. Just once, I’d like to meet someone who was normal. No superhuman powers, no monster blood running through them, not out to kill me or manipulate me into doing something, just a run-of-the-mill, doing-what-I-can-to-make-it-a-better-place-for-my-family type of person. Where were they? I did the best thing I could at that moment. I kept my mouth shut. Not the easiest thing for me, not by a long shot.

“I lived on the outskirts of a small community. We were farmers. I’d planted a few acres and was about to go home for the night when I saw a deer. It had been over a month since we’d had any fresh venison. I grabbed my bow and followed. More than once I knew I should have turned back. It was getting darker, and the deer was leading me further into the woods, but I was hungry, and my wife and kids were hungry, too. Seems that was all we ever were. No matter how much I tended the fields, by the time the bugs and animals were done with taking their share, there was barely enough for us to scrape by. I wanted that deer, I
needed
that deer.”

I nodded, knowing all too well the difficulty it took to keep one’s family fed and the guilt that arose if that wasn’t done.

“The damn thing had finally stopped to get a drink out of a stream. I nocked my arrow, slowly stood, and pulled back. I had him, couldn’t have been more than thirty feet away. Pretty easy shot. I let the arrow go when something cut in front of it. It had been going for the deer and hadn’t even seen me. The thing yelped when the arrow struck it in the back.”

“Lycan?” I asked, even though I knew the answer.

He nodded. “I’d heard about them, but never really thought much about them.  I considered them more legend, much like you. I was wrong. I just stood there; I didn’t know what else to do. It was huge, as big as a moose maybe. I froze.”

“Like a deer in headlamps,” I sympathized.

“Headlamps?”

He had no idea what I was talking about. “Umm…bright light confuses deer. They stop and stare much like you did.”

I could see him wanting to question how one could make a light that bright, but he moved on instead. “When he turned, I could feel the blood in my body freeze. I don’t think I could have moved if I wanted to.”

“How are you even alive? People that close to Lycan don’t have a high survival rate.”

“My arrow had severed its spine. He had turned, took one step towards me, and swiped out with his paw as he fell to the ground. If I had moved just one inch.” He punctuated this measurement with his thumb and forefinger. “One damned inch was all I would have had to do. When that claw dragged across my chest I thought I was on fire. That was enough to thaw my blood. I moved then, I ran all the way home even though it was too late for me…and as soon as I opened that door…it was too late for my family as well.”

“You broke the Lycan’s back and he didn’t die?”

“He did, sometime that night as a matter-of-fact, because I went back the next day to see his body.”

“But if he died that night, you should never have…oh shit, it was a full moon.”

“Comedy of errors. At least that’s the saying, I guess, but I haven’t laughed about it once. Any other day of the month, I come out the winner and have a hell of a story to tell my grandkids and the proof to back it up. This is the wound that changed my entire life.”

He lifted his shirt. He had a small, puckered scar that couldn’t have been more than a half-inch across. Didn’t even look like something that would have needed a Band-Aid had one been available.

“The tip of his middle finger broke through my shirt and barely scraped into my skin. When I got home, my wife told me how concerned for me she was. That was the last thing she said to me that I remember. Then I fell to the ground, cramps tore through my entire body. I thought this was much like what being burned alive would feel like. I tore my wife and children up that night. The images are hazy, as if remembered through a dream. I remember their cries and pleadings for me to stop and little else. I ate them. When I awoke on the floor the next morning, I was nude and covered in the blood of my family. Bones and human remains were scattered all over the floor. I went back and checked on the Lycan. He was dead, and that was when I found out I’d broken his back. Want to know what else I found out?”

I nodded, but I was thinking maybe I should have shaken my head instead. What more did I want to know? This guy had a black cloud hovering right over his head.

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