Soul
Music
They
thought it was just a cold at first.
They
were wrong.
Eventually,
secretly, ignoring their priests, they called for me.
I
knew it for what it was.
I
studied it through the bars.
Seeing
me the child snarled and flew at the door. The weathered oak shook as if struck
by a battering ram, giving final confirmation to my suspicion.
He fell
to the floor, stunned and peaceful for a moment; then I saw the feral glint return
to his eyes. Crawling away he began to croon under his breath; his body rocking
from side to side. Fingernails ripped crimson channels in his forearms, drops
staining the floor as sat, head on one side, regarding me with cold hatred.
Our
eyes locked. He knew me.
I
drew out my chosen weapon for this task and, taking a deep steadying breath,
began to play.
At
the sound of the first note, his rocking stopped abruptly. A laugh began inside
him, forcing its way out through pale red lips in single sounds, like bubbles from
hot mud.
I
changed to a different melody. A slow, halting lament, mirroring the rhythm.
The
laugh rose in pace and pitch, daring me to follow. I moved to a sailors’ jig,
rising up the scale.
His
mouth pursed then relaxed to emit a ragged giggle.
He
stared, not blinking now, no movement in him, a wailing gargoyle. Faster he
cackled; my jig became a frenzied tarantella; fingers flying across the stops.
He
threw back his head and let out a throat scoring shriek. A single note, a demented
torment to dogs and bats – and me.
With
sweating hands I gripped the suddenly treacherous pipe, lest it squirm from my
grasp and damn me. I gasped to wring the terminal note from its wooden guts
and, a ringing noise rising in my ears and lights dancing before my eyes, found
it.
It soared
out from the pipe, thin as the last failing breath that propelled it, pure as a
morning echo across a winter lake. It called with a magical summons not to be
denied in this world or the next.
A hook and line cast into the netherworld.
The
note shook, a ghostly vibrato; and returned to me, its ethereal catch snagged,
wriggling but helpless. It was dragged deep into the now cracked wooden flute
and lay silent.
The
child lay still, life betrayed only by an almost imperceptible movement of the
chest, features now smooth once more in innocent rest. I leaned against the
door, pale and sweating, legs shaking and called to them for my payment.
As footsteps
approached in the passage outside, I snapped the tainted instrument between my
shaking hands and ground the splintered shards underfoot.
They
came, but would not approach me or meet my eye. I thrust their grateful guilty gold
deep into my pockets, brushed aside their nervous thanks and insincere offers
of lodging and asked for directions to Hamlyn.
492 Words
@nickjohns999
This was written for Wakefield Mahon's Motivation Monday 'Gesundheit'
The story was also accepted for publication in Flash Flood Journal. Find this and a veritable cascade of other flash fiction stories in styles or genres to suit any taste here
The story was also accepted for publication in Flash Flood Journal. Find this and a veritable cascade of other flash fiction stories in styles or genres to suit any taste here
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