Ilyan

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Ilyan Page 6

by Rebecca Ethington


  Muffled sounds of panic exploded from me, joining the terror in the hall as I began to claw at the tape and pieces of plastic that held the thing in place.

  Everything shook in my desperation to escape whatever had been done to me, fear and panic bringing only a moment of hesitation before I pulled the tube from my throat.

  My chest screamed in pain, my throat burning in agony as I yanked, every inch of the massive tube clearly felt as I removed it.

  Rough ridges scraped over soft tissue, a scratchy scream breaking free as the tube did, leaving my throat sore and gasping. Bile poured from me, as I ripped the heavy cloth from my eyes, needing to see, only to be blinded by the bright light that flooded me.

  Overhead lights flickered in my skull as I looked around in a panic, trying to focus on the door - to focus on anything. It all spun in a blur, the motion only exemplified by the thunder of my heart in my ears.

  Lost in a fog of horrifying dreams and confused reality, I slammed my hands onto my head, palms wide over the uneven remains of my hair. I attempted to focus past the blur, desperate for answers of what horror I had awoken in. There were no answers, only the promise that something was wrong.

  Something was horribly wrong.

  I needed to move.

  I needed to move now.

  Rushing to exit the bed, I fell over the railings, the lack of restraints making the motion quick and painful as I collided with the floor. An agonizing pain blossomed in my hand as blood began to cover it, the red fluid pooling over my skin at the unceremonial removal of an IV.

  Breathing tubes and an IV. I had no idea what was done to me, what had happened, but the absence of my restraints made sense.

  You don’t restrain what can’t move.

  I grit my teeth, only to jump at the sound of cannon fire that broke through the panic. The sound was not far from me, the multiple shots of a gun bouncing off tile and linoleum as it echoed in the hollow hospital.

  I wrapped a napkin around my hand, yanking at the tiny white pads that covered my chests until the never ending beeping shifted to a high pitch moan. More cables, more tubes. I pulled them all, nose and throat burning as yet another tube was unceremoniously removed.

  I would have screamed, would have yelled, but I grit my teeth, desperate to keep the sound inside, and to keep me hidden from whatever nightmare was happening just outside my door. As the screams began to fade, yet another gunshot rang against the linoleum, only to fade into a sound more confusing and more frightening than the tormented dreams I had just woken from.

  A snarl.

  A gnashing of teeth.

  A flap of wings.

  The sounds should have been unfamiliar. And yet, I knew exactly what they were.

  Chrlič.

  Any fear I had before was nothing compared to what I now felt.

  I could hear them now, I could hear them scratch and screech and scream. The sound cut into me, the scars on my chest heating as that same burn buzzed under my skin.

  Trying to get out.

  I pushed it away, the electricity adding to the fear that just hearing them was igniting. The more I heard them, however, the more the heat grew. The heat igniting a power and confidence deep inside me, that before the dream, before holding Joclyn in my arms, before watching her die- I never would have thought to be mine.

  Staring at my hands as they burned, I tried to stand, knowing that I had to do something.

  Knowing that I could.

  My knuckles shone white as I gripped the bed rail, legs shaking as I pulled myself to stand. Shaking, dressed only in a hospital gown, hair shaved short. I faced the door, eyes wild as I waited.

  I was aware of how crazy I looked.

  I did not care. I was ready.

  Screaming rang in the halls, another bang of a gun followed by the squeak of shoes.

  My hand tightened against the rail as the door swung open. The sounds of screams and wings grew louder before it slammed shut, leaving the room in muffled silence as I stood facing the door and the back of the woman the door had spit out.

  She stood with a knife in her hand, the weapon awkward against her leg as she waited, her long dark hair swinging down her back.

  My heart jump-started, screaming that it was Joclyn, that it was her. Any hope was dashed as she turned, brown eyes widening amongst a wall of freckles as she saw me standing there, shock lining her face.

  “Jan! You’re alive!"

  It took me a minute to recognize her. I had only known her for minutes after all. Even with such a small amount of time, it was obvious that something had changed. Was she taller? Were her freckles darker?

  I hadn’t remembered those.

  I wasn’t sure.

  “Kaye,” I asked with the same accent from my dream, my voice scratchy from the harsh removal of what I now saw as an intubation tube. “What happened? What is going on?”

  “We need to go,” she continued without waiting for any response or offering any explanation as to what had happened to me.

  There were more important things.

  “Where?”

  “Not here.” Her voice was stronger than I remember, the giggly girl hidden away behind the blood that covered her fingers, smudges trailing behind her cheek as she moved her hair out of the way. “Anywhere but here.”

  My heart jumped at the bright color, at the mirror of Joclyn bleeding in my arms. I stared at her, waiting for more memory to come, waiting for more of an explanation. There was nothing but gunshots.

  Bang.

  Bang.

  Silence.

  The last gunshot lingered in the halls, filling the void of screams and steps that had rampaged for the last few minutes. Everything was tense as I waited for them to return, every weak muscle throbbing painfully. There was nothing.

  Nothing but the sound of Kaye’s ragged breathing as she turned back toward the door, the look in her eyes sending my pulse skyrocketing as the heat in my soul began to boil.

  We waited, breath in chests as the silence dragged on, only to end with a high pitched screech as a tiny dark figure slammed into the fogged glass of the door.

  Jumping at the sound, Kaye backed away from the door as she gripped the knife, stepping before me with an obvious intent of protection.

  The motion bristled uncomfortably. She should not be protecting me, I should save her. Yet, I could only stare at the door, stare at the glass as the same dark figure hovered there, hitting its body against the pane until it cracked.

  The pane split from top to bottom, cracking like lightning over the surface. With each hit the cracks spread further, long electric fingers stretching to each corner.

  “No,” she gasped, tears breaking free as moved the knife before her, the tiny thing looking ineffective as she began to shake. “No. No."

  The rhythmic bang ended as a high pitch scrape smothered the silence. A shadow of a single claw dragged down the glass, the sound like nails on a chalkboard as it chipped apart the pane, one piece after another falling to the ground.

  Slow.

  Deliberate.

  As if the monster knew this game.

  “Kaye,” I gasped, the raspiness of my voice making it almost unrecognizable.

  I motioned her toward me, knowing that I could protect her from the flying demon, although I didn’t fully understand how. One glance from her shattered any delusion of being able to do that. I could barely stand, and unless there was a gun hidden under my bed, the knife that Kaye was struggling to hold was our only weapon.

  Together we jumped as the thing smacked against the glass again, the motion sending a ripple of glass to the ground.

  The Chrlič was no longer alone. At the sound of its cries, of the glass tinkling against linoleum, more dark shapes began to join the first, each addition twisting up my spine.

  “Kaye,” I hissed again, but this time she listened, knife still held before her as she rushed to my side.

  Hospital bed between us and the door, the wide messy mattress c
reated the illusion that it would somehow protect us from the creatures that were moments away from breaking in.

  “Don’t let them bite you,” Kaye said through streaks of angry tears that were staining her face.

  We jerked as the things rammed into the glass, more tiny shards of glass tumbled to the ground as the crack spread. As tiny mud brown claws began to work their way through.

  The air rained with the pops of cracking glass, each break snapping through me in a flare of electricity. Power ran over my skin, twisting in my bones as a twisted sphinx-like face peered at us through a quickly widening opening.

  The size of a baseball, its fangs dripped with venom as it screamed at us, blood-red eyes looking between us. Calculating who to bite first.

  The scream expanded as the others joined in, Kaye stepping back further as her knife continued to shake. Electric sparks flew over my skin at the sound of the call, a vivid memory of the same monsters, the same creatures bursting through my mind. Thousands of them raining over us, flooding through the streets of an ancient city. Destroying everyone in their path.

  Prague.

  My home.

  The memory left as the Chrlič screamed again, the heat rumbling through every muscle as its arms began to pull itself through.

  “Don’t let them bite you,” Kaye said again, repeating the instructions to herself. “Don’t let…”

  The glass exploded in hundreds of shards, the pieces scattering over linoleum as the tiny monsters burst through, their brown skin streaked with the blood of those they had already killed.

  Kaye screamed as they did, the sound echoing in my head as she swung the knife wide, sending two of them tumbling into the wall.

  The heat in my body erupted, my yell joining the others as the heated pain burned. As it pulsed. Trying to break free.

  “No!” Kaye screamed, the knife continuing to swing as a few more of the things pushed through the shattered opening in the door, rushing right toward us in a swarm.

  One of the flying bats dodged Kaye’s incessant swings, claws and fangs bared as it soared right to me.

  I reached up to stop it, to grab it, to do something. Anything.

  Instead, the electric heat exploded.

  A ripple of red and yellow soared from my fingers, exploding through the room like the sound of a gun. The Chrlič’s calls echoed before two of them fell, their bodies limp as I destroyed them.

  As whatever was inside of me destroyed them.

  Kaye let out a soft scream as she fell to the ground, looking at me with a combination of fear and shock as she shuffled underneath the hospital bed.

  It was a look I returned, our eyes meeting for just a moment before I turned back to the creatures, everything around me exploding as the heat continued to pop and swell.

  Dressers exploded. Creatures were thrown away from me by an invisible hand, only to slam into walls and fall to the ground in a lifeless heap.

  And the light, the light continued to pour from me.

  Just like in those images.

  I wasn’t sure what was happening, but the creatures did. Their eyes had grown maniacal from the first spark, their screams increasing as a new danger I hadn’t expected began to brew.

  They knew what this was and they weren’t scared of it.

  They were ready for it.

  And they weren’t going to hold back.

  Sparks of light erupted in the air around me, ribbons of color trailing close behind as three more of the creatures fell to the ground with a soft thud. Five more moved to take their place, their bodies soaring fast as claws and teeth gnashed in preparation.

  I moved my hand, still trying to understand what made the power come, but instead of life and death, there was a tiny spark of red and a hopelessness that filled me with dread.

  I stepped back as the creatures flew faster, my assumed success now promising doom before a tiny moment sparked in my heart.

  A memory so faded it was more emotion than moment.

  Joclyn and I, fighting the same creatures, light erupting around us as one after another they fell. As she laughed at the game. As she slid her hand into mine.

  My magic exploded at the rush of emotion, more than a dozen falling to the ground as a ripple of light moved away from me. It slammed into the walls, cracking plaster and sending portraits tumbling to the ground.

  “Vilỳ,” I gasped, the memory sparking the word deep inside of me.

  I knew them.

  I had fought them.

  More of the things burst through the broken glass, called to us by our screams and the screams of the others. They soared around me in a spiral, moving closer in their preparation to end me. I heard Kaye scream in fear, but the sound was faded against wings, against my shouts, against the explosion that burst from me.

  I continued to fight them, light and power surging from me as I tried to control it, as I tried to defeat them. Without knowledge, however, the power began to fade, unable to fight against the numbers that were now swarming through the broken glass.

  That was swarming around me.

  Wings brushed against me, claws pulled at my skin and clothing as I began to shout. I grabbed the beast closest to me and threw it away from me. Red sparks flew behind it, the bright pops of light that erupted from my fingers as the heat that ran through me dissipated.

  They kept coming, so fast and so many that they were little more than a wall of grey, blocking out the light and any hope that we had. I tried to fight them, tried to let the explosions out.

  As I tried to save us both.

  My fight pulled in memory as the same dark alley swam before me, lines of the monsters heading right for me. Instead of a spark of light, however, instead of releasing the power that was inside of me, there was only a single word.

  “Zdechnout.”

  My head rattled as I dropped to the ground, hands overhead as I waited for the bite to come, amazed it hadn’t yet.

  “Zdechnout” a woman spoke from somewhere in my memory, this time louder, the snap of a voice I had heard before following right behind.

  It was that same man, that green-eyed monster who had beat the woman. He looked right at me as my memory approached him. The sarcastic voice of the woman he had mauled slapping at my nerves, “One down, ten million to go.”

  Claws pulled me from the moment as they ripped at my hair, my hands moving fast as I continued to swat the little monsters away while stubbornly refusing to accept that this could be the end.

  “Zdechnout” The word came again, practically screaming in my head as the memory I saw before repeated itself, a Vilỳ hitting the ground like a lead weight at the sound.

  It didn’t make sense. But nothing did, not light from my hands, not little monsters that would rip you apart.

  So I yelled. I screamed.

  “Zdechnout” The one word exploded out of me as the claws left, the gnashing stopped, and dozens of little thuds hit the ground around me.

  I uncurled from my protective position as Kaye did, the two of us sitting on the floor, looking around at the bodies that now surrounded us, the things twisted as if they had never had life in them at all.

  As if that one word had sucked it all out of them.

  6

  The smell of blood was everywhere.

  It hung in the air in waves of acid and salt; it lingered on my tongue and coated my teeth. I tasted it first, as I sat amongst the bodies, the limp things rolling off me as I shifted. Arms and wings of the tiny creatures moved as though possessed before they hit the floor with a lifeless ‘thunk’, joining the piles of the others.

  They were everywhere. Hundreds of them. They covered the floor, they hung from the television and the hard plastic chairs, they sagged over the rails of the hospital bed that Kaye lay under.

  Breathing.

  Panicked.

  Her eyes were wide as she stared at me, the brown flooded with fear.

  “Are you okay?” I asked with that same heavy accent I had in my dream
.

  The three words were a trigger and she breathed heavier, letting out several soft screams as she scuttled out from under the bed, ripping off her jacket as she jumped to stand.

  “Kaye,” I said in an attempt to get her attention, but she continued to pour over her body, ripping off shoes and jeans so as to continue her frantic inspection.

  “Katenka,” I said again, using her full name as I rushed toward her, stepping on the tiny Vilỳ in my attempt to get to her.

  She still did not turn.

  “Kaye!” I yelled grabbing her forearms as she finished removing her shirt, the fabric wadded in her fist.

  Her focus finally shifted back to me, eyes wide in panic as she stared at me. She stood in only her underwear, chest heaving behind a bright red bra.

  I didn’t look away from her eyes, I forced myself to maintain her focus, to breath slow to help calm her down.

  But I still saw.

  I saw what I had seen before but in the panic hadn’t understood.

  Her hair was longer, her face was thinner, her body matured.

  She was older.

  Older than the girl who had giggled in hiding on the side of my bed.

  I could feel my own panic growing, but I pushed it away.

  “What happened?” I demanded, the accent thick under the power of my voice.

  Angry tears welled behind Kaye’s eyes as she attempted to jerk away from my hold, the panic that momentarily ebbed flooding right back.

  “I have to check…” she growled, continuing to push me away. “I have to know if I was bitten.”

  “You would feel it if you were. It would burn like fire in your veins. You would already be screaming.”

  The words were confident, self-assured, and I knew that they were true.

  It was only then that Kaye looked at me. The fear of a bite left, the panic of what had just happened subsided and she froze under my hands, finally seeing the bodies of the things.

  “I need you to answer me, Kaye.”

  “You’re alive,” she panted, taking a step closer as though she was going to rush into my arms. Luckily she thought better of it.

 

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