The heavy scent of sulfur filled his nose when he walked
into the barn. An icy chill slid down his spine as he raised his lantern. A
figure stood in the center of the barn. The farrier moved toward it. “You sent
for me, sir?”
The figure in black let out a breath from the stump of his
neck. Once there was a head there surely. Now only gore and bone, the creature
gave off an odor of decay mixed with rose petals. He raised his arm and extended
a long finger toward a stall.
The farrier nodded with a half bow before moving to it. He
never knew how to address the coachman. The thing must have some kind of
supernatural sight to guide The Black Coach on its nightly collection of spirits.
The beast in the stall raised its head as the farrier stepped
into its domain. Its muscles flexed under the onyx skin as a hoof stomped and scraped
the stall floor.
He reached out a hand and stroked the nightmares neck. It
turned a blood red eye to meet his. The farrier looked away before it could see
into his soul. Those eyes could make a man relive his deepest pain.
He set down the bag of tools and pulled on the thick
heatproof gloves. They were cumbersome at times but better to deal with the
discomfort and aggravation of the gloves than to have his hands burnt with the
heat the beasts gave off.
Perhaps the heat of their bodies that caused the metal to
twist and warp on their hooves. Their
manes and tails looked like hellfire dancing as they ferried the coach. Fables
have said they were fallen souls such as himself. Others guess they were
created from hellfire in the great pit. Or perhaps it was better not to know.
His soul knew too much of this place already.
He lifted the hoof between his thighs to examine the warped
metal shoe. As he worked to reshoe the demon horse his mind recalled the night
the coach came for him. Not to take him to the next life, that would have been
a blessing.
He stood over the corpses, his hands dripping in blood and
gore. The last victim had taken their final breath and he stood over the body,
watching the eyes fade as the soul left the body. It was then he hard the
thunder of hoof beats.
He turned and ran down
the alleyway, turned corner after corner until the sound faded. When his lungs
started to burn he stopped and leaned against a trash bin to catch his breath.
He was sure he’d escaped his fate. Until, he felt the darkness around him move.
The farrier looked
down the alley and there sitting at the end, waiting for him. The Black Coach,
the nightmares stomping and shifting impatient to get on with their task.
The Coachman walked
headless over the cobbled ground toward the farrier. What happened next was too
much for his mind to bare remembering.
The Coachman’s cold
fingers sunk into his body and tore out his coward’s spine.
The dark creature now
used it for his whip. The farrier was cursed to serve The Black Coach, until
his soul paid for his evil deeds.
He finished with the last tack and dropped the hoof with
hands that trembled. He gathered his tools quickly to go back into his abyss
until the next time he was needed. This would be his fate for a long time to
come.
Part of the Blogging from A to Z Challenge for the letter F.
Interesting! Nice style - the reader feels and ever smells what you describe. Better catch up before you get deleted.
ReplyDeleteMary at Mary A to Z