I warn that this chapter contains scenes that readers may find gratuitously violent. Sorry.
***
The Black Widow swooped down, cackling as she flew. Her locks of shining black hair streamed behind her as her feathered wings beat contemptuously at the thin evening air. She accelerated towards the tiny figure running towards the light and safety of the small town that lay twinkling in the near distance.
Her desperate prey was sprinting harder now. She was leaving a cloying trail of fear and adrenaline, which acted like giant neon sign that said "HERE I AM! EAT ME!"
The girl could tell that she was being followed, that much was obvious. She kept turning her head to steal furtive glances at the impenetrable darkness that lay behind her. The Widow increased her speed even more so that she was almost on top of the girl, the wind rushing through the space between their bodies. She could just reach down and tear the terrified child from the ground like plucking a blade of grass.
The little girl chose that moment to look up again and the moment that she did she was doomed. Those red eyes, those red eyes that glowed like the embers of a dying star, those eyes that burned into her and made her blood turn to ice. The girl could feel her legs locking into place, powerless to resist the force of will behind those terrible eyes. She froze on the spot as the Widow landed like a butterfly on the sodden field.
"Be calm little-one." The Widow cooed softly, her forked tongue lashing out to taste the air. "I'm not going to hurt you. It'll be much easier if you stop running."
"W-w-who-who are you?" The girl stared at the beautiful woman who had been following her. The Widow's skin was a pure ivory that shone in the moon's borrowed luminescence. Her lips were the shape of Cupid's bow and red as sunset. She smiled showing perfect rows of teeth.
"My dear, the better question would be 'what are you'. But that's a story for another day. Unfortunately, you won't be able to hear that story."
"Please, let me go. I-I-I'm sorry if I've upset you for some reason." The girl began to choke on her fearful sobs.
"Oh no. Don't cry. I hate it when my food cries. Everything gets all salty." The Widow let out another harsh cackle and began to circle the shivering child.
"Why are you doing this? Why were you chasing me?"
"I'm absolutely starving, that's why." The Widow began to lick her lips at the thought of sinking her teeth into the pale throat of the young girl.
In the face of terrible danger, the girl did what she had been taught to do by her grandmother: she began to sing. The song had no words as such; it was more of a feeling deep down in the soul. The notes gave off a thin shimmer as they spilled from the girl's mouth. The air above the girl began to dance with spectral light, acting like a flare that, on a clear night, could be seen for miles around. The power was raw, unfocused; yet it was trained enough to make things even more difficult for the Black Widow.
The Widow raised a pale hand and sent a jagged fork of lightning at the girl, but the electricity dissipated on contact with a thin membrane that seemed to hover above the girl's skin. She tried again, but the young voice continued to blossom forth.
This was old magic, old and powerful. There had been a time when the Black Widow would have batted the girl aside with a single glancing blow, but she was so very hungry and so very weak. What awful luck that she should face an opponent trained in the Vocative on her first day back on Earth. She would have to use some other tactic to lower the brat's defences.
"What a beautiful voice you have child," she crooned. "Who taught you?" The girl continued to sing, obviously intelligent enough not to break her concentration. A single lapse in the lyrical weaving of the magic would result in her immediate demise.
"I doubt it was your daddy's side, men don't see the power in music. It must have been your mummy... or maybe your granny?" The Widow was determined to distract her meal from her task. She was rewarded by a brief flicker of fear. "Hmmm... yes, I see. The matriarch of your family has been teaching you."
Unsurprising, the magic was too old to be from just one generation. Though sorcerers had a disturbing habit of living much longer than they should (it had something to do with the constant magical field that surrounded their bodies), no mere human could be over one thousand years old.
Right. That was enough. The girl clearly had a set of lungs that a blue whale would be proud to own. The Widow inhaled deeply and started to scream blue-bloody-murder at the top of her voice. The sheer ferocity of the noise made the girl lose her place for the single moment needed.
The Widow lunged with triumph blazing in her eyes, but in the instant before contact with the girl's skin a white shining light barrelled into her and she was sent flying into the mud.
"Not my granddaughter you bitch!"
The white light coalesced into a tall woman with hair the colour of moonlight. She raised a long sword from a scabbard on her belt and advanced on the Widow, who stayed motionless in the muddy earth. Her cream robe billowed around her bare feet as she strode forward. The Widow rose oddly. Her neck was twisted and her arms seemed to bend at strange angles. Her face was caked in dirt and blood was dripping from a mouth that was now full of black razor-sharp teeth.
"I see that you no longer bother with the glamour, foul beast." The elderly sorceress said with a smirk of triumph.
"You caught me off guard you old hag!" The Widow crowed as she shed the final vestiges of her human form. "We both know that you can't beat me in a fair fight. You haven't got the power. I may have just arrived, but I've still got enough juice to crush you into the ground."
"My granddaughter seemed to do excellent job of holding you off all by herself." The old sorceress smirked again.