by Mitzi Danielson-Kaslik
bull's blood wine
In
a moment devoid of thought, emotion, passion or anything else but humanity, I
made the involuntary decision to step out between Sylvester Spence Palvine and
Marius Chevalier just as a mighty flash of a rapier knocked Sylvester to a half
kneeling half, half lying position in the snow. I pushed Marius aside with a
harsh gesture of my left arm and he lowered his sword, panting for air. I fell
beside where Sylvester lay, hot tears clouding my vision. The thought, emotion
and passion had returned. With the benefit of hindsight, the humanity at that
moment had forgotten.
It
cost a man his life.
Sylvester’s breath was calmer now, and it
didn’t take long for me to apply pressure to the red rose that bloomed on the
left side of the chest of his white shirt. The same shirt I had worn earlier.
The bleeding was quick to stop and when I peeled back the bloody cotton, I found
the wound was shallow and unlikely to scar. At the same moment, both I and
Sylvester looked to the sky. Dawn was breaking. The crisp snow fell in delicate
flakes down to the earth like the broken wings of fallen angels. The snowflakes
were free. Free like butterflies. Free like Sylvester. Free like me. Marius
returned his gaze to me and Sylvester and a strange unseen forgiveness filled
his eyes. In a moment of humanity, the kind I had never seen before, Marius
reached his hand down to Sylvester to help his to his feet. Sylvester took it.
The two men looked at each other as dawn broke out over the horizon and Paris
was alight once more. In a moment I have much pondered over, Sylvester performed
a quick deft movement, piercing Marius’s chest on the left side. Marius fell to
the floor. I looked down, in shock. The wound was too deep. I couldn’t have
saved him if I’d tried.
Marius Chevalier was dead.
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