Chapter 2: Rude Awakenings
This is a work of FICTION, made by and for adults 18+. The following chapter includes mentions of unintentional suicide and mandated slavery, depictions of severe trauma, objectification, humiliation, teasing, flashing, reluctance, and sensitive terminology (breasts). Reader discretion is advised.
As shadow consumed her and the air stilled, Elva stood shivering. Too frightened to move, her hands trembled while her knees buckled. Finally, she dropped to the soft ground and slowly squinted. Her gaze darted about, expecting to see the candles on the altar or scattered about the cottage; but there was only darkness—save for a bloody light leaking to her left.
"Wha— what happened?" Elva fretted,
'Do I even want to know?'
A wicked snarl preceded raging gales that carried faint purple and pink puffs past her ears. An unseen force enveloped Elva; her lip quivered and she clutched her chest. Though too afraid to glance at what had passed her shoulders, Elva's eyes widened.
'Is— Is this how I die?'
The presence withdrew as a radiant brightness flooded the room; Elva recoiled, her hands flying to shield her lids. "What's
this
?" a deep, womanly voice sung. "A lost
kitten
seems to have stumbled into my home.
And
to my
bedside
, no less."
'Ki— kitten?'
Elva slowly peeped.
'Bed— side?'
Before her was a large bed—she surmised—laid with shimmering, scarlet sheets. Confused, Elva looked down and discovered a lush, intricately detailed rug. To the side, the vermilion glow came from beneath golden curtains that covered a large portion of the wall, deepening the reddened wood of the walls and floor.
A lethargic yawn drew Elva to the young woman lying upon the bed. She could scarcely determine where the red tones of the surrounds ended and where the lady began. Her crimson hair lay haphazardly in gentle waves down to her knees. Under the dense draping, her skin—sparsely covered by a pink robe—shone like red clay. After grimacing while rubbing a lid, the woman's bewitching features relaxed to reveal the shimmering rubies of her irises. Elva shyly glanced away from the intent glare and was soon distracted by the locks that fell around her chest.
'That's...'
Her cheeks flushed.
'Those are...'
"Kitten!" Elva flinched with her scowl. "Good, the kitten can hear me." Though she seemed somewhat less annoyed, Elva was too afraid to peek again. "
Now
, what is this kitten doing in my home so early in the morning?"
"Uhm..."
'The morning? Your home?'
Confounded, she glanced around,
'This isn't Móra's cottage, but— I— I don't—'
Uncertain how to answer, Elva had to inquire, "Kitten?"
She huffed. "Good," her voice calmed, "the kitten can speak. Now, could you tell me what happened before you came here?"
"Came here? Uh, well, I..." Elva's fidgeting worsened, "I'm not sure. I was trying to summon an incubus in my cottage when— all of a sudden... I ended up here. I just," her throat choked as tears welled, "I just... wanted to feel safe." The woman didn't respond; Elva started to sweat.
'I... Oh, Brigit.'
Her lips trembled and she shivered.
'How did this go so wrong?'
Elva shut the world out.
'She's going to kill me.'
After a world-weary sigh, she lulled, "Relax, kitten. I'm not going to kill you." She shifted on the sheets. "I couldn't even if I wanted to."
'Somehow— that's not comforting.'
Carefully peering up, the woman's expression had softened as she lazily laid. "So," she tilted her head, "what brought about this kitten's need to summon an incubus?" Her tone was tranquil but something in her stare seemed somber.
"W-well, I— I need help. The hunters," she choked. Clenching her dress, Elva tried not to remember the blaze of the torches, "They're so close to my home and I-I know they'll find me now."
"Why would they hunt you, kitten?"
"W-well, I'm a
witch
. Ever since I was born, I've lived in hiding because— witches are being," her head fell, "hunted."
"So it's been since
long
before you were born, little kitten," she grieved; caught off guard, Elva perked back up. "Did you have a coven?" Her head cocked again. "A mentor surely, kitten."
'Mentor.'
Elva's gaze lowered. "Móra." She lamented, "My grandmother. The hunters found her—
us
ten summers past. There... There was never anyone else."
'I,'
, her chest hurt,
'I'm alone.'
The woman dolefully sighed, "I'm going to be blunt with you, kitten, and this will come as quite a shock." She propped her chin up to expose the cleavage in her robe. "You don't need to worry about the hunters or being alone. You're already dead."
Her heart stopped.
'Dea...'
Elva felt cold.
'What?'
She held herself.
'I... I must have misheard her.'
"I," she quivered, "I don't understand. How..?"
'That doesn't make sense.'
"How can I be dead?"
"The ritual you performed called for virgin blood," she rested her cheek under her left palm. "You used your own, yes?"
'My own?'
Elva nodded,
'But, what does that have to do with my death?'
The woman's cold composure broke; she giggled and fell into the bed. "W-wait, what's so funny?" Elva's fluster worsened with the snickers.
'What's funny about me being dead?!'
"
Virgin
," the lady's laughs subsided while she raised from the cushions, "virgin materials are sacrificial offerings that need to be clean and unused in previous rituals. If you used your own blood, then you sacrificed yourself to perform the summoning."
Elva blankly stared.
'S... Sacrificed myself? How— After all... How can it be— that
simple
?'
"
But
, I suppose," she mused, "since you appeared at
my
bedside,
you
were the one who summoned herself to
me
. Which is not only very
unorthodox
for a human but very
rude
, and
quite
illegal."
'Il,'
her gawk worsened,
'illegal??
RUDE?! I
... I just,'
Elva cradled her head.
'I just wanted to feel
safe
. How could I end up
dead
?'
"
Kitten
!" the stranger snapped a second time.
"Y-
YES?!
" her arms dropped and their eyes locked.
'Am I
really
dead??'
The woman's glare was piercing.
'Because I
still
feel like she can kill me!'
"Regarding your circumstances, you're uncontracted and you've intruded into my home, both of which are serious crimes for a human, even in the Lower Key of Hell."
'Di—'