The Journal of Onet Bynalor

The Journal of Onet Bynalor

Something on the air disturbed Caine. He sniffed like a hound after game, and then snarled about something being familiar. He readied his weapon and bounded off. I took after him, close on his heels. Feeling his rage, I told him to keep his wits, stay aware of himself.

I didn’t come here for fucking games,” he told me. “I came for answers. And I will get my fucking answers!”

How could I not commit myself utterly to his cause? Answers. Explanations for what we have faced, and what we are still facing. I want them more than anything. He does, too. In that, we have common cause above and beyond the obstacles and distractions we tackle along the way. Then the truth of his curse was made clear. We were ambushed by wolves

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A Midnight Visitor
Flash Fiction, Romance, Fantasy Leah Sage Flash Fiction, Romance, Fantasy Leah Sage

A Midnight Visitor

The intruder stopped a mere foot from his bedside, but Kayne did not move, nor stir. The girl watched him breathe, deep and steady, as he watched her through his lashes.

A small intake of breath was the only thing he heard before she leaned over him. Kayne felt his body tense against his will, but the girl didn’t seem to notice. She brushed his face with hair that smelled of hyssop and lily of the valley. One of those slender hands settled soft against his chest, the other touched his cheek, eyes, and lips so gently that her touch couldn’t have been any more profound than the flutter of a hummingbird’s wing.

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The Journal of Onet Bynalor

The Journal of Onet Bynalor

Mother,

Where do I even begin? Reason would say I begin at the beginning, but finding a vampire spawn hidden beneath a church suddenly feels like the least important part of the things that have happened. Which is telling in and of itself. I should have set ink to paper to put it all down last night, but I couldn’t stop my hands from shaking. Wallach sat with me for a time, asked about how I was managing. I didn’t really know what to tell him, or what I shouldn’t. I was thankful for the comfort he offered, truly. But it’s difficult enough to write the things I think and feel to you.

Vampires are real.

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Brix, Flick, Pox, Blunder, and Tic
Flash Fiction, Fantasy Leah Sage Flash Fiction, Fantasy Leah Sage

Brix, Flick, Pox, Blunder, and Tic

Beneath the broken mushroom cap of a great toadstool on the opposite hill, a snarling face watched as well. The brigand goblin hunter stood clad in decrepit armor slung with savagely crude weapons. Small as her frame was, she cut a terrifying figure, even when measured against the grotesqueries of her companions. Brix whistled, and for a creature so cruel in countenance, the sound was unexpectedly lovely, like a nightingale’s call.

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The Kit Queen
Flash Fiction, Fantasy Leah Sage Flash Fiction, Fantasy Leah Sage

The Kit Queen

Yara did not rouse a paw to stop the vengeful kit in her flight. It was true, the Steel Fang Clan only had use and need of the strong and the deadly. And if Mirmir lacked the wisdom to see the strength of her opposition, or the cunning to know when to withhold her claws, then the kit would be a future rival her mother need not fear.

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The Journal of Onet Bynalor

The Journal of Onet Bynalor

Never has so much happened in a single day. I’m exhausted and weary. We all are. The neverending twilight-like gloom does little to help. I am going to note as much as I can before I stagger off to find where I shall fall for the night.

Undeath is a plague on this place. It is everywhere. Leaving that house of death, we took to the road and chanced upon a rider, von Holt. Wallach seems the most apt to speak to people without blundering it, leading him to naturally take the lead. It is amusing, though, to watch Caine whisper directions in the unblinking man’s ear. The arrangement works just fine for me.

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Against the Odds
Flash Fiction, Fantasy, Adventure Leah Sage Flash Fiction, Fantasy, Adventure Leah Sage

Against the Odds

The thunder of hooves on the ground drowned out the wind and thunder that battered horse and rider. The heavy beast ate up the wet earth and muck as if the cold and rain could not touch it. Its every breath was as ragged and labored as its rider. Streaks of lightening illuminated the pair in bursts, and then left horse and rider both blind and lost in the wet and the dark before another flash of violet light split the sky.

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The Journal of Onet Bynalor

The Journal of Onet Bynalor

It is the same day as the previous entry. We have some two and a half hours before midnight.

Gustav and Elisabeth Durst were disturbed and lost people. It’s difficult to say who is to blame for what, or just exactly what happened in this house, but I have some guesses. I think Elizabeth is responsible for the course here. In her bid for immortality, she sacrificed her unwanted child. Whatever the ritual, I can only assume it was either botched, or her offering simply wasn’t enough.

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The Journal of Onet Bynalor

The Journal of Onet Bynalor

Mother,

I did something I did not mean to do, and now I don’t know where I am. I think I met it. Him, I believe. Your patron. I spoke to Him. And to something else. Or, more correctly, something argued with Him. I don’t know if I summoned them to me, or if they brought me to them. I’m sorry I cannot write more, but I feel it would be unwise to commit all that was said to the page. I will have to press myself to repeat the words every so often. Hopefully that will help me to remember them. Why now, after all this time, has something finally answered me, and why did it have to be Him? Did I bring myself to this place, or did He? As the now, I have no answers, only maddening questions. Questions made worse by the mutterings of this most irritating person.

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Checkmate
Flash Fiction, Thriller, Horror Leah Sage Flash Fiction, Thriller, Horror Leah Sage

Checkmate

Many of the demons we face aren’t even of our own making. They are generational, handed down to us to battle without ever knowing why they were created in the first place. Every now and then, we are handed the chance to be free of them. Tava has a chance to shake off one of her mother’s making, but one should never think for a second that they are smarter than a devil and fight him alone.

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