'It would certainly send a message if we did it outside,' someone agreed.

'It would attract unwanted attention,' Horace snapped, leaning heavily on a short staff of knotted ash, which wasn't the usual one he used when he got tired. That had shattered beyond repair on Jinn's arm not so long before. 'We are only fifteen or so, we are not strong enough to pick this fight yet. We do this in secret now but will pass the feathers on around the Wolds so that others will know our intention. Our army will grow.'

'What of the book you promised?' a dark blonde lady asked, turning her pale, watery eyes onto Horace and away from the toasting fork she'd been inspecting.

'Ella,' Eutopia remembered she was the baker's wife, her once delicate beauty ravaged by woe until she had become the hard-faced pinched looking woman she was now. 'We tried. Take heart in the fact we haven't given up, we've just had to deviate from our initial path. We didn't plan on this happening.'

Jinn had been watching and listening to the conversation going on around him, but his interest peaked at the mention of a book. He had a penchant for books, as Eutopia had already discovered, but these people shouldn't know what one was – they had been banned for so long.

'Will you send her after it again?' Ella asked. Horace stiffened.

'We must first do what needs to be done. We will discuss this when this – matter – has been taken care of.' The blonde woman pressed her already thin lips into an even thinner line, her pale, washed out eyes flickered to Eutopia, who had been watching the stony-still form of Jinn beneath his net.

'Horace, we can't do this, you can't let this happen. It makes us just like them,' Eutopia said softly, her lower lip raw and near bleeding from where she had chewed it with concern. The old man turned his blind eyes upon her, hearing the sorrow in her voice.

'No, it makes us even.' It was Jed that replied as he briskly swept back into the cottage, slamming the door shut with a kick behind him as he pulled a handful of long, thick iron stakes from beneath the logs in the basket he carried. The stakes were roughly hewn, four sided that tapered from a top measuring three inches across to a wickedly sharp point that Jed fingered with a cold smile. 'A life for a life, isn't that right?'

'A tooth for a tooth,' Jinn agreed amicably as he began to slowly force his shoulders up, feeling the wire-thin metal beginning to weaken and give where it had been repaired so many times. Scott looked alert suddenly, taking his pitchfork up in both hands and crouching low.

'We need to do this now,' he warned. There was a soft snickering sound, like the twang of a silk thread when stretched too tight, and Eutopia saw more of Jinn's beautifully unsullied feathers ruffle up, free from the constraints of the wire mesh.

'This isn't such a good idea. I'd hate for anyone to get hurt,' Jinn reasoned lowly as he raised himself up onto one knee. Jed flung himself on top of a feathered wing as the angel began to shake them out like a bird preening, cleaning off the dust.

'Don't just stand there!' Jed yelled at Scott, who stood blinking stupidly, the pitchfork slipping to the floor in his surprise. Marcus cried out some warbling war cry as he launched himself onto Jinn's back, grabbing a handful of his thick, dark hair with one hand and swinging his beloved bat, without any real aim, with the other – delivering a crushing blow between Jinn's shoulder blades.

'Pin him down!' roared Jed as he flung an iron stake at the nearest figure, who just happened to be Tally. A thick set, shaggy man named Alfred snatched the huge pin before the bewildered girl could even blink. He clutched it tight between his gappy teeth as he flung himself down and seized a thick handful of sleek feathers as deftly as he would have grasped the reins on a plough-horse and drove the sharp spike of iron right through the meatiest part he could find, hammering it to the floor with the chunky hammer he'd loosed from his belt.

'No!' Eutopia burst out, rushing forwards as Jinn batted the hulking figure of Alfred away. Jed had managed to pound another thick nail into the wing-tip he had half fallen with and half wrestled to the ground, as Marcus took better aim and swung his baseball back towards the back of Jinn's skull as he clung to his muscled back by his knees, just as Jinn twitched his head to the left and avoided the blow. Tally joined the fray, throwing herself towards the flailing wings as Jinn ripped himself free and rose up more, arching his back as the now ragged tip of one wing swept the bare floor.

'You'll stop there,' growled Scott. Jinn caught the edge in his voice and looked up, the snarl of indignation frozen on his beautiful face. The boy had a handful of Eutopia's hair wrapped around his dirty fingers and the lethally sharp points of his pitchfork pressed tight against her exposed throat. 'You'll keep still now or I'll kill her.'

'You'll do no such thing you foolish child!' Phoibe blazed, careening towards Scott with a meaty fist clenched.

'Wait,' Horace ordered, catching hold of his wife's sleeve as she passed. 'The boy might not be all that foolish.' Although Horace couldn't see, he could sense the crackle of tension lesson and he imagined the way Jinn's shoulders would sag slightly. Scott was a blundering, unfeeling lout at times, but Horace had to admit that he was on to something here. Scott pressed his advantage, jabbing the pitchfork further against Eutopia's neck so that one prong sank against her soft flesh and released a thin trickle of blood. Eutopia cursed him, twisting her head away as best she could to relieve the pressure. Phoibe cried out into the silence and Horace tightened his grasp on his wife.

'He really does love her,' he whispered deadly soft, as he sensed Jinn's wings spread slowly. He could almost hear the way the delicate downy feathers dropped a little from his shoulder blades, exposing the sloped, thick sinewy link where human-like flesh melded into feathered wing.

'Let her go,' Jinn said, his voice level but every word dripping with a dangerous intention. Scott laughed.

'You're not in the position to command now, Commander,' he sneered, his brown teeth bared at Eutopia as he grinned. 'Got your weakness. Jed, Alfred, cut 'em off, he won't give us no trouble now. It'll be as easy as pulling wings off a fly, but a deal more satisfying I'd wager.'

Jed stood, panting with the exertion of trying to nail down one of Jinn's wings, as Alfred retrieved his mallet from the floor and took a cleaver from Ella. Both men advanced upon the angel with a little more caution as Jinn slowly raised his hands to lace them behind his head. His eyes were scarlet with fury, fixed on the dribble of blood that trickled from Eutopia's neck. He didn't flinch when the men each gripped a handful of his feathers and stretched his wings out further to expose that soft, fluffy join a little more. The firelight glinted wickedly off of the blade of Alfred's cleaver as he swung it.

The hard thunk it made as the metal embedded itself deep into the thick wood of Scott's pitchfork handle was almost sickening. Only Jinn's eyes had been fast enough to catch Eutopia's catlike reaction as she slipped from Scott's slackened grip and yanked the wooden handle from his hand before she had flung herself across the room to deflect the hammer and blade from his wings. Alfred, fuelled by adrenaline and disappointed by the lack of blood shoved Eutopia hard enough to send her reeling. Jinn caught her deftly, sweeping her out of harm's way with one arm and brushing the swooshing arc of metal away as Alfred rushed at her.

'She is the key!' Jinn roared. 'She is the key and I have the book you need.'

'Shit,' Jed muttered, his blacksmith's hammer falling from his hand with a clunk. Horace nodded, sagely.

'He's on our side, leave him be.'

You've reached the end of published parts.

⏰ Last updated: Nov 01, 2015 ⏰

Add this story to your Library to get notified about new parts!

Eutopia - ApocalypseWhere stories live. Discover now