Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
Demon Dream - 6. Salvation
.
Just then, within the house,
Tarogo had woken
When the old woman’s sounds
Of happy chattering
Had interrupted sleep.
Turned over now, he tried
To fall asleep once more,
But the bodily pain
Rumbling from his famished
Stomach kept him alert.
What’s more, it kept his brain
As restless as his gut.
His rationale spun that,
‘She said she’d make breakfast
Once the morning appeared’—
Like iron to magnet,
His glance flew over to
The one restricted place—
‘So in there must be where
She’s hiding all her food.’
Outside, her hands caressed
Her arms ‘round and around
While she swayed to her song.
One foot dropping before
The other as he went,
Tarogo now tiptoed
Across the earthen floor.
The moon made her shadows
Fluid across the grass,
One foot ‘fore the other,
And grace in one body
– In ground, and light, and life –
Crept into her being.
One foot ‘fore the other
Took Tarogo to the
Only forbidden door.
One finger, and then two
Grasped the frame, and could slide
The door slowly open.
One moment needed more,
For eyes could see nothing
Inside the dark chamber,
But once he stepped aside
The light found its way in
To show to Tarogo
Shadows like piles of bones.
He tugged the door harder,
And there fell to his feet
A half-devoured head
Still shrieking with just one
Terrified eye socket.
Decomposing flesh stung
Deep in Tarogo’s nose
As he looked upon horrors
In overpowering shock.
Stumbling backwards, his legs
Collapsed from under him,
So he was left to drag
Himself from the dire sight,
Fingernails clawing dirt.
Finally, he inhaled,
Sucking in just one draught
Before returning it
To the night as a scream.
The old woman halted,
Hands still raised in the air,
Her eyes clouding over
As she looked to the house.
Her breathless cry pleaded,
“No. For once, just one no.”
And ‘No!’ escaped her heart
As a single tear fell
Through the moon’s frigid light.
Fell ‘fore hate crippled her.
She brought down her hands and
Watched them as they grew long,
Spiteful and ferocious,
The nails sprung like razors
To slice up lying men.
Her arms burst with muscles,
The skin dead like leather
But pulsating dark red
From the ogre’s rage-filled
Heart forcing the crone’s blood
To every blistering pore.
Her jaws split wide apart
As new teeth cut her gums
With fangs that dribbled down
Her own blood on her chin.
* ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ *
Yukei woke with a start.
Tarogo face hovered
Above his with a fear
The likes he’d never seen.
“Ogre…. She’s an ogre,”
The servant said lowly.
But to Yukei’s confused
And sleep-choked reply of
“Who,” Tarogo shouted:
“The woman’s a demon –
She kills and eats people!”
In a daze from which it
Appeared hard to ascend,
Yukei climbed to his feet
And followed to the place
Tarogo was pointing.
At the bloody threshold
The master understood,
Recoiling in horror.
Quickly he realized
The poor trapped soul of
The human being must
Be the Oni-baba
Local children speak of
To frighten each other
On the long winter nights –
The Harridan Demon
From legend immortal.
Tarogo had scrambled
Back up upon his feet.
“Wait!” Yukei called out, but
The servant was too scared
To be hindered just by
Commands from his master;
And to the front door ran.
There he paused, hands in frame,
Breath panting outside air.
His eyes searched frantically
For the least little hint
Of where the woman was;
And so, seeing nothing,
He bolted through the door.
He ran to the clearing
And leaped into the field.
But as he leapt, his back
Began curiously
To feel moistened with pain.
His eyes turned just in time
To see the ogre’s claws
Glistening in the moonlight,
Slashing his back once more.
And again, they ripped his
Flesh with no real mercy.
His head still turned to her,
Tarogo’s one surprise
Was looking into the
Demon’s contorted face:
Was pity in its eyes…?
Just as pain reached his mind,
Those monstrous hands struck out,
This time not letting go,
But anchoring deep in
The servant’s ribs and spine.
In agony, he flinched
From the teeth biting him,
And felt his own blood pour
Like hot rage down the breast
Of the Oni-baba.
Yukei came to the door,
Knowing he lacked the time
To do anything for
A man he truly liked;
A man he then watched die
And leave the world as less
Than any person should.
In his own heart he fought
To regain self-control,
For he knew he needed
To conquer fear if he
Was to confront the thing
The old woman had let
Take possession of her.
It was the woman, who
Was still deep inside, he
Needed to assist him.
The demon spotted him –
Its eyes like blind revenge.
The unearthly creature
Leaped from the field’s tall grass,
And on sightless feet, flew
Towards him in the house.
He jumped to the far wall,
Pressing hard against it
To flatten himself out.
The fiend had stopped its rush,
Waiting outside the door
As if to heighten fear.
Yukei shouted at it:
“Old woman, just listen –
Don’t let the spirit break
Your agreement with it.
I kept my word to you;
Did not open that door.
You said ‘No’; I obeyed.”
He whispered on softly,
“Woman, fight for yourself.”
The demon ran inside,
Fueled by hateful anger,
But the old woman fought,
And because her own heart
– Thanks to Yukei’s teachings –
Had emptied of hatred,
The ogre was weakened.
It made it halfway ‘cross
The hardpacked earthen floor
– With arms outstretched to slash –
When the old woman took
Back controlling her life.
Mere feet in front of him,
The beast fell to the ground,
Desperately mauling dirt
To try and get at him.
But then, most quietly,
The old woman’s features
Began to reappear.
Her arms reached out to him,
As if beckoning him.
After he swallowed hard
To bravely steel himself,
He leaned down cautiously,
Soft-touching her shoulder.
She didn’t move, so he
Gently rolled her over.
He saw her leg was bent
Backwards into a flap,
Snapped in many places.
She then opened her eyes,
And from between those slits,
Yukei witnessed placid
Gratitude escaping.
As she breathed her last breath,
He held onto her tight
So she'd not die alone
And with his simple act,
Shattered the demon's dream.
~
_
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Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
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