Author's Note: While the main character in this story is one with an ongoing series in the Loving Wives and other categories, this is my first submission into this category. While it is not necessary to read the previous chapters in this character to understand the contents of this particular chapter, new readers are more than welcome to do so.
This particular story deals with psychological horror and the need to understand what comes after in this life. While I maintain my own beliefs to myself, this story is inspired by legends and stories of folks that had comeback from near death experiences. While the majority of those stories describe a white tunnel leading to a bright light with their family members waiting for them on the other side, I decided to tackle that scenario in a different way. This is the journey of a man whose life had been filled with violence and death.
For those unfamiliar with my writing style, I tend to place a lot of detail into aspects that should be noted at face value, while giving foreshadowing events a quick oversight. This helps drive the story in certain directions while allowing me creative freedom in case I want to change certain themes between chapters. Like I said before, the character in this story is one that I have given an entire and ongoing series in the Loving Wives category, this tale begins with "Long Road" and roots out into other characters that have interacted with him in life.
Please rate, comment, and share this story, and add me in your favorites to continue following the story. If you are not a fan of the Loving Wives stories, rest assured that my story is not in the common archetype that is normally found there. Enjoy this story.
Much love,
aka_Mike
*****
Where am I? The uncertainty is an unfamiliar feeling to me as I stumble down the well beaten path laid before me; the grasslands beside it are overgrown and beaten by the cold northern winds. Each blade of grass standing resolute against the onslaught of the wind, each tiny grass pod gently caressed by the magnitude of the winds; I can see their elegant dance as each pod is caressed by the violent wind with each updraft. But still, the uncertainty of this place that is wholly unfamiliar to me is the most dominant thought within my being.
Instinctively, I reach to my chest, where that wound should be, where blood and gore should be dominant only to find nothing amiss. I feel no pain save for the one that the bitter wind drives into the core of my being; I can feel my bones rattle as they too face the coldness. My feet, weary with the elements, move as if filled with lead. Each step I take is a trial onto itself, a strange pain shoots from the center of my foot and upwards into the pit of my stomach. I understand the pain; I have understood pain all my life.
From the very first days of my life, I had been molded, tailor suited to fit a role that fell upon me like a blanket, and covered my entire future with its black strands. My rebellion was to walk away from a life that I was well suited for but deep in my heart did not want. I had seen what that life could do to well-meaning individuals, I had tasted the blood of innocents, and even to this day so many years later their voices still haunt me. I understood pain, of that there is no doubt, but this pain was beyond reasoning.
The few people that know where my life was headed always asked me the reason why I walked away. It is far simpler to tell them how due to my actions a number of innocent people were killed for the sake of family honor, but even that is a thin veiled lie designed to stop the questions. I did not feel anything for those people then, and all I feel for them today is an empty feeling and a haunting that does not release me. Not even in my waking hours. But even that, while troublesome now, would not have been enough to deter me from that life.
As my self-induced death march continues, my mind wonders to events from the past, things that I have seen and done which led me to that fateful place that brought me here. My mind filled with thoughts of both despair and resignation, this place had been spoken of in many legends that I had heard growing up. My father often spoke of it in hushed whispers, always filled with dread and sorrow, knowing that he too would walk these paths when his time came. As had his father and his father before him. Ours was a violent people, and this was just another step in our evolution.
"You are here early, Daemon," the ethereal voice said, its tone masked by the wind but still very feminine. "You should not be here," the voice continued, "not yet anyways."
"I didn't think they would go as far as they did," I replied with chattering teeth, my already slow pace becoming more labored.
"You don't seem surprised to see me," the voice continued, this time closer to me as if it was whispering those words in my ear. "Your father prepared you well, I see."
"He did his best," I replied, this was a fact. I knew better than to lie to this entity, this too had been a warning that I had received from my father.
"The men in your family have become wise," the voice said just as a warm gush of wind caressed my face, I could swear that I felt the very fingers of the unseen hand gently running through my bearded face. "I am not sure if I am pleased with that, it takes away some of my joy."
"We have a short memory," I replied, "I am sure that it won't be long before someone forgets the proper ways." As I spoke, the air around me warmed a bit, and my footing became easier to manage. The pains had almost disappeared, I knew she was the reason for this and I was truly grateful for this moment of reprieve.
"You remind me so much of your great grandfather," she mused, "he too knew how to properly speak to a lady." The wind shifted and I could feel something like an arm wrapping itself around my own arm. "But tell me, Daemon, why are you here so early?"