The village was in trouble. The fields had not yielded any healthy crops. The well had become contaminated, and only recently had the village physician declared it clean. That was his last act, as the next day they found him keeled over in the middle of the street. The pox had claimed him. Now there were fears it would spread, and the supply of medicine in the village was low. Gravely, they buried the physician and two strong men guarded the medicine chest, only distributing under the direction of the village head.
There was hope, however. Next month, Carter would visit the village. Who was Carter? No one knew anything about him, except that he was an extraordinarily wealthy merchant would pay in gold for goods. Where the man, or more importantly his riches, came from, nobody knew.
Not that anyone cared. Their only concern was that they find goods to sell, so they could buy the supplies they needed for the oncoming winter.
In the village square, everyone gathered to discuss their situation.
I have my mother's dresses!' one woman called. 'I can sell them for three gold pieces!'
'I have my scythe!' called a farmer who had been let down by this season's crops. 'I can sell it for four!'
'I have a jar of beetles!' yelled a small boy. 'I'll sell them for ten!'
'People, listen!' the village head cried, trying to keep things under control. 'Trinkets will not sell for enough gold, and we mustn't give up the tools of our trade!'
'Then what should we do?' demanded the village innkeeper. 'Offer Carter our blackened stalks or rotted vegetables? I don't see you offering anything, head. And you stand here in finer clothes and with a wider belly than anyone here!'
There was a noise of agreement from the crowd, and someone shouted, 'Strip him!'
The head glanced nervously behind him, and another man strode forward.
'Friends, do not take your anger out on him!' he cried. 'I have a proposal!'
The crowd quietened down and listened. The man's name was Beckett, and he was the orchard keeper. With his powerful build and booming voice, Beckett commanded respect from the other villagers. He had fared better than most during the crop failures, but the strain of the past few months was visible to everyone who saw him. Yet he still stood tall.
'My crop has had some results this year, but not enough to save us,' he said to the crowd. 'But if we pool together every scrap of food we can spare, every horseshoe, every piece of lumber, we can present a haul to Carter who will give us enough gold to see us through the winter.'
'But we'll starve if we give all our food!' the innkeeper called.
There was a murmur of agreement.
'I cannot demand you to give up your private stocks,' Beckett held out his hands. 'But we can do this if we do it as a village. Neighbour must help neighbour, and we will survive. And to the one who offers the most, I can provide a reward.'
The crowd's interest visibly sharpened.
'I will present to the one who provides the most,' cried Beckett, 'my daughter, Elise's, hand in marriage!'
There was a noise as everyone began talking at once eagerly.
'My daughter,' Beckett called, 'is only eleven years of age, but as anyone can see, she will grow to be a beauty. When she comes of age, she will be happily married to the one who contributes the most to save our village. Give your hauls to me, friends, and I will judge the winner!'
There was a roar of approval, and the crowd dispersed, talking excitedly.
At the back of the crowd, Callum was thinking.
No one had noticed him, which suited him fine. If they did, they were likely to sneer at him. Callum was shorter than all the other boys his age, and instead of the sandy blond hair the rest of the village boasted, Callum sported a head of messy light brown. So he was something of an oddity, and many jeered at him for his small build and hair which they took as a sign of low intelligence.
But Callum was deep in thought right now. He was thinking of what Beckett had said.
For the girls of the village, once they came of age, they were often married off and only then considered true village women.
However, the boys had a different rite of passage to adulthood.
Even when they came of age, they would not be considered men until their first successful hunt in the woods.
As it happened, last week was Callum's 18
th
birthday and there had been snide comments on how he would likely never succeed in catching even a wood pigeon.
Callum had been furious and fantasized about striding back into the village with a whole herd of deer on his back and seeing everyone's faces. Or perhaps a wild boar, or even a wolf. He dreamed about the endless possibilities, but Beckett's announcement had made up his mind.
He would go into the woods and bring back game to sell. And Callum knew exactly what he would go after.
He would hunt a Beast.
The Beasts lived deep in the woods. Some claimed they were fairy tales, but the villagers knew better. The older ones had seen Beasts in their day. They walk like humans, the old ones said, but are savage animals.
No one in the village had seen a Beast for years, but stories of how they would invade in the dead of night and make off with livestock, food, and even people were used to terrify children sitting by the fire. Beasts were said to have fur, fangs, and vicious claws. Sometimes hunters used to go into the woods after them. More often than not, they would come back empty handed. But other times they wouldn't come back at all, and the depths of the woods became places of terror.
Only once had someone ever successfully hunted a Beast. Years ago, in another village a hunter had come back with the creature in his cart. He had sold it to a wealthy furrier and had received so much gold that he and his entire family were able to retire in luxury.
If that was how much a dead Beast fetched, Callum could only imagine how much a live one would sell for, especially to Carter.
He didn't care about marrying Elise, but with that kind of money, he'd be the hero of the village.
These thoughts swirling in his head, Callum hurried eagerly back to the butcher's.
The butchery was a small shop with a series of wooden sheds where hung ducks, poultry, beef, rabbits, fish, and all the other produce the butcher sold to the village.
It was also where Callum lived. Wallace, the butcher, had taken him in after his father had died when Callum was ten. Wallace was a large beefy man, who could probably provide more meat than all his stock put together. As soon as he had taken Callum in, he'd put him to work preparing the meat in his sheds from dawn until near midnight.
Callum found him carving a rabbit when he walked through the door.
'Where have you been?!' he roared, brandishing the bloody knife.
'At the meeting,' Callum replied, coming around the bench and picking up a knife.
Wallace grunted. 'Are we finished then?'
Callum told him what happened.
'Bunch of straw-brained fools,' Wallace grumbled. 'They'll starve while trying to win her hand. No guarantee she'll grow up pretty either.'
'Beckett thinks they have a chance,' Callum observed.
'He's spent too much time in the sun,' Wallace snorted 'No girl is worth starving for a season.'