Total pages in book: 50
Estimated words: 47894 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 239(@200wpm)___ 192(@250wpm)___ 160(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 47894 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 239(@200wpm)___ 192(@250wpm)___ 160(@300wpm)
There were shots then, close by, and I heard yelling and shouting, before something came through the bushes—an adult fox followed by two juveniles. They weren’t brand-new roly-poly kits, but they weren’t that old either. As soon as they were just a couple of feet from me, the three of them froze and stared.
“No, no, don’t stop,” I urged, terrified they might run from me and be slaughtered by the hunters. Crouching low, I called to them as my grandfather had taught me, using the pull of my magic on an animal that was also, in some ways, like me. Foxes and witches both lived on the cusp of the unseen world.
Making an instinctive choice, the adult leaped forward, reaching me easily, and the smaller ones scrambled after. I frantically searched around for any kind of cover, when my eyes noted the opening in the tree above my head that I guessed many squirrels or owls had used over the years. Hoping the hollow was empty, I scooped up the first kit, lifted him up, and stuffed him inside. An instant later, his little face was looking down at me.
“Thank you for my blessings,” I said to the universe, grabbed the second one, and got him in beside his brother. Finally, I turned to the large fox—a vixen, obviously their mother—and asked permission to lift her. She stepped back, and the little ones whined. “No, no, please,” I pleaded. “I can figure—oh, I know.”
I bent and patted my back. I then straightened and repeated the motion, willing her to understand. When she darted away, my heart dropped, but then in a blur of motion, she was flying toward me. Leaning over, hands on my thighs, I braced myself so she could use me as a launch pad. She was in the hollow with her kits in seconds. I got a chattering thank-you before she ducked inside, out of sight.
My relief made me shiver, the adrenaline pumping and then dissipating almost knocking me on my ass in the snow. No doubt, the endless night from hell was wearing on me.
Moments later, while I was still trying to get my breathing to regulate, three men and five mastiffs came barreling through the brush and halted abruptly in front of me. The lead dog came at me, growling, snarling, teeth bared, and instinctively, I smacked him hard on the nose. His instant cry would have been funny—there was no way I actually hurt him, just startled him—if the man on the left hadn’t lifted his musket and leveled it at me.
The whole thing was insane. Musket, not a rifle, and the man was defending a dog whose head was bigger than mine.
“Boy, have you lost your mind?” the man on the far right yelled at him, hitting the barrel of the gun that looked like many of the antique weapons I’d seen in our local museum. “Never take aim at another man unless you plan to kill him.”
“He hit Festus.”
“Which brought your beast from his blood frenzy and did no other damage.”
Blood was right. The third man was leading a draft horse draped with the pelts of foxes, wolves, and bobcats. My stomach lurched. The worst of all was the wolf, as there had not been any in or near Osprey in two centuries.
“You do not kill a man for defending himself against an animal,” the third man chimed in. “Especially an animal so ill trained that we’ve been all over Mr. Corey’s land chasing that thieving vixen because your addle-brained brute charged when the others waited.”
In fact, the four other dogs were all sitting now, regarding me. They were interested, especially since, I was sure, I reeked of fox, but the first dog had been the only one to try and take off my face.
“If he be worthless, then let this be the end of him,” the man said and lifted his musket, aiming at the dog’s head.
“No!” I shouted, shoving the gun away as I’d seen the one on the right do, pushing it away from the other two just in case his finger on the trigger was in mid-press. Didn’t want anyone to lose a leg or a foot or anything else. There was no nearby trauma center to dig out a musket ball. “You don’t kill your companion.”
“No, you do not,” the first man thundered, wrenching the gun from the younger man’s hands and whacking him in the abdomen with it. He doubled over, barely able to breathe. But with how big the first man was, and the force he’d used, I wasn’t surprised. “Festus belongs to me now.”
“You cannot take my—”
“Of course I can. The pup is mine, as is his dam,” he thundered, the disgust clear in his voice. He turned back to me then. “What are you doing out here in the woods? Are you trying to get yourself shot, or is your plan to catch your death of cold?”