Episode Two - Ash and Feathers

 

Part Five - Beginnings and Endings

Tula eyed the Muck Witch.

“I’ve told you my entire story. All that I know and understand of it. My grandmother found me lying in an alley where the man had left me. She saw the cage that took the place of my heart and knew right away that I had to come to you. She told me the rules that I must follow to seek your aid.”

“Your grandmother gave good counsel,” said the Witch.

“So you can help me?” You can restore my heart like you did my voice? Make me whole again?”

“No," said the Witch.

“But, Muck Witch, please! I beg. I will repay you any way I can. I have no coin but I will work for you! I can cook, and tend to your animals!”

“I do not need those services,” the Witch began, “but more importantly I cannot fix this curse. This wicked man has taken what is yours. You do not know where to find him. You do not know where he has absconded with the core of you. Even if you could find him, the only way to repair the damage done is if he willingly returns your heart.”

“Then I am lost?” cried Tula.

“No,” said the Witch. “You have lost something. You have lost something essential to you. But you have not lost yourself. Even though you are changed by this ordeal, you still have your life. That is more than many get to keep after having the heart of them removed.”

“My life? What good is that? The wicked man took my life as well as my heart. He claims the world will soon end, I with it. You as well, I suppose.”

“That does concern me.” said the Witch, flipping her braided hair over one shoulder. “The world happens to be where I make my home. Ending it would cause me great distress.”

“What does that even mean?” asked Tula. “How does one end the world? And what does this have to do with me and my heart?”

The Witch gathered all of the scattered bottles and carried them back inside her hut.

“Come girl.” She said, “We will put tea on and I will tell you a story about the making and breaking of the world.”

The Witch put a kettle on the wood-burning stove and produced a tin box from the massive collection of junk that lined every surface in her hut. Tula didn’t see her light the stove, but felt the heat emanating from it the moment the kettle was placed upon it. The Witch opened the tin box to pull out a handful of aromatic leaves and flowers which she placed into a porcelain bowl on the table.

“Which story have you been told?” she asked Tula.

“I’m sorry, ma’am?”

“Let us start with the beginning.” said the Witch as she poured hot water from the kettle into the bowl then placed a lid atop it. “What tale are you told about the origin of the world and all things in it? There are many stories and I am asking which is yours.”

“I see.” said Tula, “I suppose that the story I have heard most is that of Maj the Shaper. He stood in the firmament surrounded by void. I forget how, but he built a fire. From that fire he forged the world.”

“That is the essence of the story, yes.” said the Witch. “Have you been told others?”

“Yes,” Tula said, “my grandmother told me that the world always was. That one day people emerged from a hole in the ground or a cave and we have spread upon it ever since. And once I saw a man in the market preaching that the world is an egg laid by a giant waterbird and when it hatches we will all be food for the baby bird.”

“That is one of my favorites,” said the Witch. “So. If you have been taught that Maj created the world have you also been told of Mur the Destroyer?”

“Oh yes! He is to come after the final war of mankind and suck the life out of every living thing. Then he will wipe the world clean with the sacred fire. Then it all starts anew I think.” Tula was unsure about that last part.

“So, there are many different stories regarding the beginning and the end, no?” asked the Witch.

Tula nodded.

“In Arodem,” continued the red-haired woman, “they claim that the world was squeezed out of the udders of a colossal she-goat. In the Red Valley it is said that the world is formed by the music of a piper and if she ever stops playing, we will all cease to be.”

Tula laughed at that one and the Witch glanced sideways at her.

“Is that any more silly than a giant egg or a man forging the world on a vast fire?” asked the Witch.

“I guess not.” said Tula, “But tell me, Ma’am, which of these stories is the right one? Which is true?”

“They all are.” said the Witch as she poured the tea into a pair of mismatched and chipped cups.

“Are you saying that all are equally true or that they are all equally false?” asked Tula.

“That is an excellent question,” said the Witch. “It is one I cannot answer.”

“What is the point of asking me all this anyway?” Tula asked. “What does it have to do with the wicked man and my heart? Is he planning to start the final war so that Mur will come to draw our souls into his black lungs? Or will he crack the massive egg or interrupt the piper? How do all these stories help me become whole once more?”

“I already told you, child. There is no making you whole again. Not in the way that you mean. And if that man means to end the world he may well succeed. Even if he fails and you somehow convince him to return your heart there is a chance that...” she looked down at her tea as she trailed off.

“A chance of what?” asked Tula.

“There is a chance that you may no longer want it back.”

Part Six - The Sorcerer’s Bird

“Fool!” Enin said, “Damn old fool! That’s what you are!”

Shouting at himself in the pitch blackness; this is what the wicked and mighty Enin had become- a withering husk of a man, a grey skeleton crying in the shadows.
“So certain of yourself, old man. So full of hubris. You sought to make yourself a god. Now look at you. You’re too dried and ancient to even produce a single tear.”

He held the heart in front of his face. He could not see it the way one sees in the light, but still he sensed it before his own eyes. The heart felt warm and bright in his hands, as did the girl from whom he’d stolen it. It had been a great sin to take it from her. Not his greatest sin by far, but a terrible thing nonetheless. She screamed and squirmed as he held her down to do his hideous work upon her. Enin apologized to her as he cut out the core of her being for his own needs.

“It is the only way.” he had said to her. “I am sorry for the pain I must cause you, but I need this and can not stop myself.”

Shutting out the memory of how he won this prize, Enin felt it pulse in his hands. Even now far removed from its host the heart beat strong and full of life. Still, the pure heart did not light the way as expected. He saw no Door. Just darkness.

“Idiot.” came a voice not his own. It startled the old man before he remembered he was not exactly alone in this cave.

“You’re doing it wrong, you decrepit turd!”

Enin glanced down at his chest reflexively in spite of his blindness in the utter dark.

“What would you have done differently, feather brain?” he retorted in the direction of the voice.

The voice came from Enin’s own heart, or what passed for one. An iron cage rested in a hollow cavity in his chest, much like the one he had forced upon Tula Petek. Within it sat a starling. Had there been even a mote of light it would have reflected iridescently off the bird’s black feathers.

“You read the scroll of Aina. One must have a pure heart to see the Door.”

“I DO have one.” boomed the old man, waving the heart around blindly.

“You can’t just hold it out like a candle, you dullard. The heart must be a part of you.”

“But...”

“I may be a birdbrain, but I’ve seen a thing or two in the centuries I’ve lived within your chest, old man. The only way you can find what you want is if you tear your heart out. Again.”

“But to do so would-”

“Kill you?” finished the bird, “No, I’m sure it wouldn’t. Besides, isn’t that the whole point?”

“It may merely disable me.” said Enin, “Make me unable to move. Trapped in this cavern, frozen for eternity.”

“That it just might,” said the bird, “but maybe not. What have you to lose at this point? You’re trapped here either way.”

“But if I release you, what will you do?”

“Fly away!” squawked the bird, “Far away from you!”

“At least you are honest with me.” said Enin, “I suspect you are correct. I have no other option, do I?”

“None that I can see, but even I can’t see in this pit.”

Enin covered the heart in leaves once more. He set it gently down and began reciting a very ancient incantation. Strange syllables unheard for aeons poured from his mouth. The metal in his chest grew warm, then hot, very hot, creating light in the pit of darkness for the first time in living memory.

The pain grew immense as the cage went from red to white hot. Within the bird fluttered and hopped and screeched in pain.

“I don’t like this!” the bird howled.

“It will be over soon.” replied Enin. It was a phrase he’d spoken many times. In another life as a surgeon he’d said it to soothe his patients. As a killer to silence his victims. Today he played both roles at once.

With a brilliant flash the door of the cage burst open. Instantly the bird popped out, singed but not permanently harmed. It stretched its wings for a moment, glanced at Enin in the fading light of the heated metal and flew off the way they had come. It did not say goodbye to the man that had held it captive for centuries. Even if it had wanted to, Enin was certain the power of speech left the creature the moment it exited his body.

The next step of the operation would be the difficult part. Enin’s entire body burned with pain. Without a living heart his corporeal form would soon cease to function. He fumbled for the vital organ of Tula Petek, but between the darkness and pain he could no longer locate it. With great effort the old man managed to flip over to his knees and felt around the cavern floor for the precious object. He knew it must only be a few inches away from him.

He tried to curse in frustration but no words escaped his mouth, his very breath absent. Frantically Enin swept around the pit with his hands, each movement stiffer than the previous. His arms and legs began to feel like rusty hinges. If he had a tear to cry it would have poured out of him, but Enin sacrificed his ability to weep long long ago. The old sorcerer truly had nothing now. Even the bird he’d exchanged for his heart had abandoned him.

Falling on his face, the old man gasped dryly, unable to catch a single breath. This was his end for certain, paralyzed on the cold stone, trapped within himself for all eternity. Having given up his mortality in ages past, Enin would reside here, motionless until his mind snapped.

Something brushed against his neck. A leaf, one he’d used to wrap the heart, had fallen near him on the cavern floor. With intense effort, Enin turned his face toward it. His right arm had lost all motion, but his left still inched along. Using his fingers like the legs of a spider he managed to crawl his dying hand along the floor toward his face. Every inch of ground covered by his hand sent stabbing pain along his chest and spine, but Enin continued.

The hand soon felt warmth. The soft and beating heart of Tula Petek had rolled loose of the leaves, but had not broken. Grasping it in his wicked left hand gave Enin a miniscule spark of life. Just enough vitality surged through his veins to scoop the organ toward his sunken chest.

As he pushed the heart into the broken wreckage of the small cage it began to beat faster and faster. The pain subsided a fraction and Enin managed to press the broken cage door shut over the heart and roll onto his back. The fire in his muscles ebbed and his lungs began pumping the stale and musty cavern air. Nothing in his long life had ever tasted as sweet.

Glancing upward, Enin saw a light. It glowed blue, no yellow, no...not any color he’d ever witnessed. The light took the shape of a ring floating just a yard or two above his face. Enin sat up and reached out to it.

He reached out with his fingers to touch the light of the end of the world.

Part Seven - Tula’s Tale

“Tell me, Tula,” said the Muck Witch, “how did you meet the man who did this to you? How did he dress, what did he look like?”

“I sold fish and oysters at the market in Kara Lys to the south. Mine is a fishing village a half a day from there. My grandmother and I have sold there for years. We have our own stall. She tends to it while I carry baskets of our wares about the square.”

Tula took a sip of the tea the Witch had given her. It was hot and aromatic with a hint of spice. She admired the cup for its sea-foam color and deep blue rim as she held it in both hands to feel its warmth as if she could draw strength from the vessel.

“On market day the man approached me. I cannot picture his face. It is as if he used some trick or glamor to make me forget it. He wore fine and colorful, but rather flamboyant, clothing. He had the bearing of a nobleman, but his attire did not resemble that of the refined folk I would sometimes see in the square. He wore a coat of crimson with gold trim and a tall black hat. He had pale skin, even whiter than yours. He resembled the men from the islands to the north, in the Bay of White Whales.

“The Kasrae Islands?” offered the Witch.

“Yes, that’s it. One of the sailors my father fished with came from there. He had skin the color of snow...as did the man who did...this.” she pointed to her chest.

“So the man who stole your heart was a
thaumaturge from Kasrae?” asked the Witch. “I have known a few from that region. They have usually proven to be fine and joyful people. But as with all folk, some among them are rotten, I suppose.”

Tula continued, “The man said he wanted to purchase an entire basket of fish- all I had been carrying. He offered me an extra lion coin for myself if I carried the fish to his home.”

“And you did not question this?” the Witch asked her, “A strange man offering you a coin to follow him home?”

The girl set her cup down and looked the Witch in the eye. “What choice would a child such as I have, Muck Witch? Had I refused the man, he could have struck me for such insolence. Perhaps it is different wherever you hail from, but here in Vatrus people know their place.”

The Witch turned her head away as if looking out a window, but her tiny hut had none.

Tula continued, “He led me to a narrow street I’d never walked upon and instructed me to set the basket down. I did so. Then I looked up as he fell upon me.”

“I’m sorry,” said the Witch. “I meant not to blame you for his actions. What that madman did was terrible and his fault alone.”

“I tried to scream but could not make a sound. I did not speak again until today. The worst part was the look in his eyes.”

“The wild gaze of a madman can be horrifying.”

“No,” Tula said, “it wasn’t like that. His face was full of remorse. He apologized as he cut me open. He seemed as if he were to fall to tears as he explained to me that in thirteen days the world would end. I lost consciousness while he spoke of the ritual he would perform. I don’t even know why he was telling me. It felt as if he simply wanted someone to talk to.”

“This man has committed a horrible violent act upon you, girl.” said the Muck Witch. “He is not worthy of your empathy.”

“Thirteen days until the world ends,” said Tula. “That was five days ago. Could it be true? And if so, how? And please, no more stories.”

“The man you have described sounds familiar to me,” said the Witch. “I cannot be certain, but many years ago I met a man in Kudrakai. He was Kasrae by birth and his style of dress was similar to the man who stole your heart.”

“That means nothing.” Tula said. “There could be any number of men in the world who fit that description. Pale white skin and a coat of red?”

“That is not the part which got my attention,” said the Muck Witch. “But I know of a man whose eyes are full of sorrow even as he ends your life. They call him The Baneful Surgeon or The Kind Killer. You never knew which you would find until he came upon you.”

Tula sipped her spiced tea. She held the cup in both hands once more and asked, “Who is this man? Is he a warlock?”

“Among other things, yes. He has walked the lands of this world longer than I have. At times he has been viewed as a savior, and others a destroyer. If he is the one who harmed you, then I admit I am in fear.”

Tula reached out and placed her hand over the Witch’s.

“Who is this man?” she asked.

“His name is Enin.”
 

A Bird for a Heart - A New Fantasy Fiction Podcast by Michael J Patrick

 

As I've said before, Nothing Is Wrong will be back for season three in the fall. In the meantime I have so far completed two episodes of a fantasy fiction podcast, A Bird for a Heart. You can listen to it at this link.

Episode two will be available on the morning of Monday, December 30th. 

 If you are enjoying Nothing Is Wrong and/or A Bird for a Heart, then feel free to support me on patreon or  by rating and reviewing my podcasts on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Audible, or the podcast player of your choice. Another great way to support a podcast you love is to share it with friends!

Happy Holidays and good fortune in the new year.

A Bird for a Heart Episode One - Wanderer, Wine, and Witch

(Note- there is an error in this episode where I speak the same line twice. This sort of thing is usually caught while editing, but I've had a busy month. I deleted the extra line and reuploaded the audio file, but it seems like each podcast player maintains a cached version of the bad copy. I guess you just have to forgive me).

If you would like to support this podcast you can do so by writing a review on Apple music or the podcast player of your choice. This story was written and recorded in New Jersey on Lenapehoking territory. Intro music is 'Shoulders Of Giants' by Scott Buckley - released under CC-BY 4.0. www.scottbuckley.com.au 

Episode Transcript: 

 A Bird for a Heart

Part One - On The Road to Aurelia

The girl with a bird for a heart walked alone on the road to Aurelia. After days of travel, the bottoms of her bare feet had grown blackened and calloused until they were as hard and brown as the ground on which she tread. Her blue dress hung torn and dirty from her bony frame. Her skin looked as tan and tough as the walking stick she carried. She was a young girl, but the elements and fatigue had worn her face ragged and her hair as tangled as the dry weeds that dotted the landscape.

A cart drawn by two paksi approached from behind on her left. She did not so much as glance toward it. A Boy her age drove the cart, its bed filled with barrels. The sweet smell of Aurelian wine wafted from them.

“Ho there!” shouted the Boy. “You there! Hop in! I’m headed the same way! I can take you if you like!”

She did not turn to look at him.

“Do you not hear me?” said the Boy as he came up beside her. He yanked the reins that steered the paksi and the enormous birds walked in step with the girl. They were beautiful specimens with black feathers and crowns of white and blue and ivory colored beaks. Each stood a head taller than a fully grown man, dwarfing the girl beside them.

“I’m trying to offer you a ride, you filthy hen!” the Boy said to the girl, frustrated at her silence. He peered down at her from his cart. Through her torn bodice he caught sight of something on her chest. It looked like a semi-spherical box of black metal. “What’s that you have there?” he asked.

She did not reply.

The Boy gave up and urged his paksi to move on and put distance between him and this uncivil mute girl. He was busy making an important delivery and had no cause to be wasting time helping some unappreciative outcast. He took one more peek at the object poking out of her dress and recognized it, not a box, but rather a small metal cage protruding from a bloodless cavity in her flesh.

His jaw dropped open and he made a sign with his hand to his chest- a gesture his grandmother had taught him to ward off curses.

“I beg pardon of you. I see now that you have been hexed.” said the Boy. “You must be seeking the Muck Witch.”

The girl did not even seem to hear him speaking to her.

“Well,” the Boy continued, “I know the rules. You cannot accept any help. I understand now why you are playing mute. Just so you know, you are on the right path. Just a few miles then turn up Thornhollow Bend. From there you’ll see her hut on the edge of the bog. I’ll be leaving now, wanderer. I wish you good luck on your journey. It is almost over, I hope.” He smiled nervously and urged his birds to move on quickly.

Before long he was a speck in the distance.

The girl continued with no aid besides her stick.




Part Two - Not the Vintner’s Son

The Boy reached the estate soon after his encounter with the outcast girl. He wheeled over to the great hall and spoke to the doorkeeper.

“I bring casks from Madora, the vintner. They were ordered for the wedding.”

“The vintner usually sends one of his sons. I don’t know you.” said the doorkeeper.

“I am a simple servant. The vintner’s sons are away on business elsewhere. The vintner sent me instead.”

“Bring down a flask so I may sample the wine, Boy.” said the doorkeeper. He was an older man, but large and imposing. His long droopy mustache suggested a lifetime of military service. He was unarmed, but carried a horn that could summon the guards of the estate in an instant.

“Sir, my instructions are to bring the casks into the great hall. They are for the wedding feast, not-”

“Do as I say child or get the back of my hand!” the man bellowed. The servant Boy shut his mouth and scrambled to the back of the cart.

“You understand that breaking the seal will ruin-”

“I count seven barrels.” said the doorkeeper, “I reckon we can spare one.”

The Boy set to the task of applying the spigot.

“I don’t have a glass for you, sir.” he said once the wine was ready to be poured.

“Use this.” the man said as he extended a small drinking cup.

The servant took the cup and filled it. He would have considered it an insult to the vintner to serve his wine in such a filthy vessel. Rather, he would have if it had actually been the vintner’s wine and if he had actually been the vintner’s servant.

The doorman sniffed the wine and took a swig. After a pause he gulped the whole cup.

“More.” he said, wiping his mouth with his sleeve. The Boy refilled the cup and once more the man downed it.

“It’s good, isn’t it?” asked the Boy.

“What would you know? You’re just a dirty child.”

“May I complete my delivery now, sir?” asked the Boy.

“Very well. Be quick about it.”

The barrels were quite heavy, but the Boy managed to get all of them into the wedding hall. After he finished the Boy tipped his cap to the man and urged his paksi to leave upon the same road they had come. The doorman closed the door and set the lock.

Once well away from the estate the Boy whispered to himself, “It’s done. Enin is  inside the hall. I’ve done what he asked. I’m free.”

Within the great hall one of the casks rattled.

Part Three - The Muck Witch

The girl approached the hut as if it were a slumbering beast that may awaken at any moment. The conical structure seemed to grow out of the ground itself. It stood just before the place where the dry land gave way to bog. The sun shone above but the dense tree cover ensured that the domicile remained constantly in shadow. Beside it stood a small pen that housed a few blue swamp hens. There did not seem to be a door at all, just an opening.

Silently she padded up to the building. The great toothless mouth of the doorway revealed only solid darkness. She peered into the black, expecting a wrinkled crone to stare back at her cackling and covered in warts.

When her eyes adjusted to the dark she saw no one- just a straw bed, a table, an iron pot and shelf upon shelf containing a massive collection of bottles and trinkets. The girl walked around the hut and found no sign of the witch. Perhaps she had the wrong hut or maybe its owner was out doing whatever witches do. The hens looked well cared for so the girl assumed the latter.

She found a dry stump in the clearing before the hut and decided it would be a good enough place to rest while waiting for the witch. After an hour or so of waiting someone approached.

A young man and woman walked cautiously toward the girl. Their rough clothing and lack of shoes marked them as peasants. Each had the brown skin and hair typical of the local people. The woman’s belly swelled with child.

“Muck Witch!” called the man, “My wife is not well. She carries our son! Please aid us!”
The girl stood up but did not speak. The couple drew closer and she saw that the woman leaned heavily on her husband, unable to support herself.

“You’re just a girl!” spat the man. “Where is The Witch?”

The girl said nothing.

“Who are you? Where is the Muck Witch? Can’t you see my wife needs help?”

Even if she could have spoken, the girl would not know what to say. She had no knowledge of healing and no idea where The Witch had gotten to.

“Well, if you cannot help me and The Witch is not present, then I shall have to do it myself!” said the man as he strode to the opening of the hut.

“Husband, no...” said the woman weakly, but he did not seem to hear and dashed inside The Witch’s home. The girl looked at the woman. Torrents of sweat washed down her brow and her breath was heavy and pained.

Seconds later the man returned with an armful of bottles.

“Maybe one of these is the medicine you need, dearest.” He held a flask out to her- small and opaque with a glass stopper. He put his hand over it to open the bottle before a voice from the bog interrupted him.

“I would not do that if I were you.” said the voice. “Cacodaemons are frightfully difficult to bottle up again once they are released.”

The man turned toward the bog and said, “Is it you? Witch? Show yourself! I come only seeking your aid!”

A white skinned woman stepped into the clearing. Younger than one would expect, no more than thirty years with her long red hair kept in tight braids. She wore an outfit of green and brown cloth with fine leather boots. Her face and clothing remained perfectly clean even though she stepped forward from the direction of the bog.

She ignored the couple and approached the girl.

“You,” she said, “you have traveled a long way to come here.”

The girl did not reply.

“Ignore her.” said the man, “She is just a dumb child. My wife is ill. We need-” The Witch raised her hand to silence the man without taking her eyes off the girl.

“Let me see it.” said The Muck Witch, poking her finger toward the girl’s chest.

“Witch, I beg of you...” at this The Witch turned around. She looked at the pregnant woman for a moment and then to the collection of bottles in the man’s arm.

“The blue one. It is filled with dried leaves. Make a tea from them and have your wife drink every last drop. Then she should rest.”

“That’s it? Asked the man, “And that will save my child?”

“No.” said The Witch. “The babe is already dead.”

“But...”

“There is nothing that can be done about that, man. Do as I say and your wife should live. Perhaps she will even be able to bear another child.”

“M-my child...” stuttered the man.

“Do as I say and leave me, man. And be thankful. If you had come any later you would have lost both child and wife.”

“Thank you.” breathed the pregnant woman.

The man dropped all of the bottles, save the blue one and the couple left The Witch alone with the girl.

“As I was saying, girl, show me what you have there.”

The girl lowered her blouse enough for the witch to see the tiny iron cage. It resided in an almost perfectly round hole in the center of her chest. Inside it sat an even tinier bird- some sort of finch. Its foreparts were a sooty grey with flecks of yellow, and its wings darker, but similarly unremarkable. The bird would have looked quite plain if not for the brilliant tuft of vermillion feathers above its forehead.

“Dear creature, be not afraid.” said The Witch. “Sing for me your song.”

The bird chirped. Timidly at first but then stronger and with what sounded like joy.

“Titihihihihihi!” sang the little creature.

The Witch clasped her hand over a delighted smile. “Yes! Dear friend! All will be well, I am certain.”

She picked a bottle from the pile the man had discarded. She unstopped it and placed the tip of her small finger inside the neck. A dark yellow pigment coated her fingertip. She brushed it over the girl’s throat, making a tiny amber mark.

“Now you, child. You may finally speak.”

“My name is Tula Petek!” she gasped, “I was cursed by a horrible man! He stole my heart and replaced it with a bird! He took my voice!”

“Who? What man? Why did he do this thing?” asked the Muck Witch.

“I do not know his name.” Tula Petek told The Witch. “He was a stranger. He said he needed my heart for a ritual. He said it was perfect for his needs. He told me that as long as the bird resides in my chest I will remain alive, even until the end of the world, but I would not be able to speak to warn anyone of his plan.”

“The end of the world?” asked The Witch. “Did the man happen to mention when that is to come?”

“Yes. In eight days time.”




Part Four - Beneath the Estate

Enin had work to do and a world to end.

A tall man from the north, as a Boy he ran away from his small village to see the world. As he grew to manhood, Enin traveled the realms in search of wisdom. He discovered the magic of the stone men and the craft of the hidden people of the Red Valley. Enin had unlocked secrets he’d never expected and been struck with curses he’d never imagined. The worst of them all was the curse of life.

He opened the lid of the barrel which had allowed him into the wedding hall and got immediately to work. He passed the beautifully carved columns of kordwood and did not pause to admire the ornate reliefs of Maj, the Shaper forming the world with sacred fire out of the raw material of the void. Enin glanced briefly at a depiction of Mur, the Destroyer sucking the breath from all living things at the end of time before moving on.

Enin held a hammer and wedge. With them he pried apart the floorboards. It took several attempts before he found what he needed- an opening. Once he located the correct spot, Enin swiftly tore a hole in the floor, wide enough to climb down into a tunnel beneath the structure. Cool, dank air rose into the hall.

The estate had been built on a very old parcel of land. Long before the worshippers of Maj and Mur ruled Vatrus the world had been a much different place. The land had been tamed over the ages, but in some places could still be found the breaches- openings between this world and the other.

Most breaches were hidden deep underground. A few, such as this one, could be found closer to the surface. To this day the locals told tales of the tunnels beneath their lands and the dreadful things that dwelled there.

Enin took in a lungful of the cavern air before dropping into the hole, the wet earthiness of it filling him. Though only a few feet deep, Enin could sense that the tunnel extended far and led to where he desired to be. Ducking on all fours, Enin entered the dark passage and crept forward in the blackness.

The further he went the narrower the tunnel became. After several minutes of crawling Enin could barely move. After several more his hands felt the lip of a ledge. Reaching down, he could not feel the bottom. Enin carried no light with him because he knew the caverns were not empty. He knew that a light in such a place would be like a bloody chunk of meat in a lion’s den. He climbed down leg first and hung from the ledge. Still, the bottom of the cave eluded him. Clinging to the ledge with only his fingers, Enin kicked his legs below himself in search of a cave floor but found none.

Worrying that he had come to the wrong place, but having no other choice, Enin released his grip and slid down the rock wall.

He fell longer than he had expected, but the wall sloped slightly and he reached the bottom with minimal injury. Scratched and bruised, but largely unharmed, Enin groped around in the black pit, searching for A Door.

Several times he scanned the pit with his fingertips. Several times he found nothing but the cold stone of the cave.

Enin stood and fumbled in the dark. He measured the pit at roughly twenty feet in diameter. For at least an hour he ran his fingers along the walls and floor of the cave but found nothing. He had surely come to the right place. The scroll he took from the Temple of Aina led him here. The opening, the tunnels, the pit - all were as predicted. This must have been the correct place, but The Door was nowhere to be seen.

An ocean of time seemed to pass over him. Enin’s thirst and hunger gnawed at him. He carried no tools except the hammer and wedge, no provisions save one. That was the rule. In such matters, the rules must be followed. The darkness does not offer its secrets to those who come cautiously.He knew that. He knew that he needed to cast off the needs of the mortal world before he could enter the breach. He had fasted for three days before coming. He had become as clean and pure as humanly possible. The only impure part of Enin was his heart, but he had prepared for that.

From the black tunnel above him, he heard unsettling noises. Chittering, scratching, breathy sounds of something or several somethings moving about unseen in the cavern.

Enin reached into his pack and retrieved a small sack. He opened it and removed an object the size of a pear wrapped in leaves. Through the wrapping he felt it pulsing and warm.

In his life Enin had committed many sins. He had wronged many people, but always, he said, for good reason. Here in the dark pit he discarded the leaves that covered his prize - the wet and beating heart of Tula Petek. He felt her pain when he stole it from her. He carried her cries in his ears every day since. Enin did not wish to harm her. He did not wish to harm anyone, but he knew this was the only way. Without a pure heart he could not open The Door.

Many more hours passed. Soon the preparers of the wedding would discover the hole in the floor. Enin doubted any would dare investigate the tunnel. He would never be found. The legends regarding the dark things beneath the estate still haunted the minds of the people. They would most likely cover the hole and act as if they had seen nothing. Or perhaps they would burn the hall to the ground and lay heavy stones over the spot where it stood. Perhaps they would salt the land and place wards and totems around it to prevent any from ever suffering the fate of the fool who ventured into the darkness.

But Enin would not die. Enin could not die.
That was his greatest gift and his greatest curse.

He could suffer and starve and wail and scream until the end of the world, but before that time he would be doomed to sit in a dark dark hole clutching the heart of Tula Petek.


 

It was smoke. No, it was darkness, like a piece of the night sky had been torn out and brought to the world. It shifted and flickered as if not meant to be and existed by force of will alone. It took the form of a man and within that form twinkled stars and galaxies. If Tula looked closely she could make out high cheekbones and an aquiline nose, but she dared not look closely. 


A Bird for a Heart is a fantasy fiction podcast written and recorded by Michael J Patrick. Coming December 15th.


Intro music is 'Shoulders Of Giants' by Scott Buckley - released under CC-BY 4.0. www.scottbuckley.com.au

A Bird for a Heart podcast teaser!

A Bird for A Heart is coming to a podcast player near you on December 16th!


Intro music is 'Shoulders Of Giants' by Scott Buckley - released under CC-BY 4.0. www.scottbuckley.com.au

Coming in December - A Fantasy Fiction Podcast by Michael J Patrick

 


 

In a world unraveling under the weight of an immortal sorcerer’s despair, Tula must confront the man who quite literally stole her heart. Along with a cunning demon bound to her by desperate choices, she journeys through a land scarred by destruction, seeking to be made whole again before darkness consumes everything.

A tale of resilience, reckoning, and the cost of hope, A Bird for a Heart explores what it means to hold onto your humanity when the world demands you let it go.

 Written and recorded by Michael J Patrick