by Mitzi Danielson-Kaslik
warm sherry
Later in the day, we decided to stop by a
stream as Gillidore wanted a drink and I obliged at the chance to
sit down and rest my legs and wash my face which, looking in the reflection in
the water, was covered in black berry juice. It was at this point that I noticed I was
sitting a great patch of shade, but it was not cast by a tree. The shadow was
far to blob shaped to be a tree. Standing up abruptly as if I had seen something
unpleasant, I called Gillidore’s name
into the air to get his
attention. “What do you suppose is casting that
shadow?” I asked nervously as he looked at me with big brown eyes he performed what looked like a shrug and
went back to his stream. Taking my things from the shadow, I walked as far away
from it as I could but turned around to see that I was in another
shadow. I opened the book to
find the contents even more deranged than when I had between my journey and realized that
the shadows must have caused the pages for
damage somehow. I stepped away from this new shadow but
found myself once more in shade. Then the noise in my mind was back. It was deafening and I could not
escape it. Gillidoreturned to see me with my hands over my ears and he cantered towards me.
“We have to get out
of here…” I whispered, afraid the shadows would hear.
“And where would thee go?”
he questioned “Thee cannot escape the shadows.” He was right. We couldn’t escape
the shadows. We were doomed. It took me a moment to realize that daylight
was slipping away. I did not even know what to write in the book to
escape it.
In desperation, I opened the
book with shaky pale
hands to the page I was on and wrote five simple
words: They
found a safe place. I prayed
it’d become true. How do you
hide from shadows? Suddenly, the
pathway we were on came to a dead end. The muddy tracks untouched by footprints ran
out. We were trapped. Then the
soft light of the twilight moon shone down and a honied scent of
lavender, cherry blossom and thick spring dew wafted out over the meadows as
dusk drew in further. The subtle rustling in the lush green leaves on the trees
bathed in the gentle white moonlight seemed to cease as the bright stars emerged
from behind the veil of the pearly clouds and shone clearly; casting great luminescence upon the scene beneath.
There was a heavy wooden door embellished with cast
iron fixings and a stiff, rusted griffin head knocker ahead of us and which was
imperiously embedded in the thick rough grey stone wall, overgrown with healthy
green ivy, which defended whatever lay beyond. Its hinges unoiled, it creaked
open with a push as the moonlight beamed down upon the delicate golden
keyhole.
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