Angels of the Killing Hymn

The Hierophant

by RoxyNychus

Tags: #cw:gore #cw:noncon #angels #brainwashing #dom:female #f/f #hound/handler #mind-control #sub:female #biting #blood_drinking #body_horror #cw:gaslighting #degradation #drugging #fantasy #graphic_violence #halo_play #hypnotic_eyes #identity_manipulation #memory_alteration #mindbreak #role_reversal #rough_sex #trans_main_character

Weeks pass, and my relief fades.

 
We’re given a sabbatical to allow the Proxy to finish guiding Sholanan to enlightenment. A vital task, but each deployment is another chance to prove myself. Without them, there’s only training exercises. Shooting range, melee drills, both hand to hand and with dummy knives, so on. I’m good at these. But they’re only training, meaningless until applied in the field.
 

The tipping point comes one Midweek afternoon, during the weekly sermon. We kneel in the space above the temple, listening to the congregation file in below. The Proxy arrives a short while after us, leading our new sister in by the hand. Sholanan wears a white-and-green robe to match ours and her eyes are no longer swollen and circled in red, though their sky blue has yet to become gold. She hasn’t found enlightenment yet. She’s close enough, however, that she dons a face mask of her own.

 
The Proxy leads Sholanan to a spot in our circle. The latter’s eyes dart back to us, uncertain, but she settles as the Proxy guides her down to kneel. Whatever doubts Sholanan carries, our guiding star alleviates them. In their place is something approaching our serenity. For a moment, I’m happy for our new sister. Until she nods to something I don’t hear and the Proxy pets her dark curls. When the songs begin the Proxy remains hovering over her, their voices intertwining.
 

It hurts. I know that’s stupid of me. We all need the Proxy to teach us. Sholanan would never be able to join us without her guidance. But it’s the wrong time for me to see it.

 
It should be me.
 

That thought stays latched onto me. Every word of praise for my sisters, every trusting look or hair brushed out of a shimmering golden eye, becomes another thorn caught in my skin. I try to ignore them. My mission is to serve Queen-Minister Charith. So long as I do that, nothing else truly matters. A nice thought. But it matters to me.

 
The next day, I reach my limit. We’re in the showers after a melee drill. Physical strength isn’t Getye’s strong suit, so I bested her. Imeshan could match me but lacks my mastery of the techniques. It’s only Brea who manages to wrestle me to the mat and keep me there.
 

She’s across the shower room from me now, eyes closed as she works her fingers through her short hair. I swear she has that smug little grin on her face. The thorns sink in. I can’t ignore them anymore. I storm across to her. Her eyes open just in time to see me push her up against the tiled wall, take her by the back of the head, and kiss her.

 
Her lips are soft and I slip my tongue between them to find hers. It’s sweet, laying there for me. Her breath hitches. Shaken? I hope so. That would mean I got her on something. I keep us locked together a few moments, tasting her, before I feel my point is made. Pulling away, I take a moment to savor the sight of her catching her breath.
 

Brea looks up at me. A drawback of the peace always reflected in our eyes is that it’s that much harder for us to know what the others are thinking. Does she understand? Did she feel me use her at leisure and know I won’t let her best me so easily?

 
She makes her thoughts clear when she grabs me by the back of the neck and pulls me back in.
 

What she does then is less kissing than her bringing a meal to her jaws, hungry and tactless. Her tongue slides in between my teeth as she presses her lips to mine as if to swallow me. Mercifully, she keeps it short, biting my lower lip lightly and pulling it with her as she retreats. Pain jolts through the skin until she lets go. Now I stand dumbstruck, watching a little smirk play across her face. The serenity in her expression only makes it worse- only deepens the sense that she’s mocking me. She’s still got my hair, twining the long red curls between her fingers. I tear her hand away. With a huff, she returns to bathing.

 
I consider escalating. For a dark moment I want to ram her up against the wall and use her in other ways, more deeply, more harshly. But then I would be transgressing. We can compete. We can even hate one another. But we must not harm each other. Cratavn needs all of us. I catch myself trembling with impotent anger. Getye and Imeshan are watching, Getye with her big curious eyes and Imeshan with her sorrowful ones. I return to my own shower, hoping it can prickle away my nerves. It doesn’t.
 

***

 
The next morning, the Proxy collects me from our quarters and leads me through the winding halls. She’s silent as we walk, her face its usual pale mask. The sky outside is blue and clear but a harsh wind rattles the windowpanes. It isn’t until she leads me upstairs that I realize where we’re going. All I can think is that this must be about my actions in the showers. I allowed my frustration to push me a step too far and now my Queen wishes to punish me personally.
 

A stack of letters and papers stands at the head of the Queen-Minister’s table. The air of Her quarters is cold despite the sun flooding in through the tall windows, and the air smells more of ash than cinnamon. I don’t see the Queen-Minister herself. The Proxy leads me to the front of one of the lavish cabriole sofas arranged around the fireplace. “Wait here.”

 
As the Proxy strides away, I clench my fists tight. The fireplace is out, only a skeletal heap of charcoal left in it. Again the windows rattle as another gale hits them. An element snaps to life as the Proxy turns on the stovetop in the kitchenette across the massive room and places a kettle on it. A faint hint of gasoline sours the air.
 

She looks over her shoulder at me. I straighten. She’ll say something now. Give me some hint as to our purpose here. Several moments pass. A shrill warbling reaches my ears as the kettle begins to boil. She has said nothing yet. Clarification, and the relief it might bring, dangling just out of my reach. Perhaps it’s part of my punishment.

 
The kettle rises to a whine and she turns back to it. For the second time today I tremble, impotent.
 

Finally the door swings open, and She enters. Queen-Minister Charith outshines the daylight, a cape of ivory and gold flowing from the shoulders of Her coat and a crown of silver atop her head, decorated with discs of polished emerald. Her bootsteps fill the room as Her presence warms the air.

 
Her eyes go to me first. “Down.”
 

I kneel before the sofa, its back blocking my view of my Queen and Her Proxy. I only hear boots on marble, then whispers. A shiver runs through me as I catch the husky music of Her voice.

 
Their exchange is brief. At last She approaches, coming to sit cross-legged on the couch in front of me. She holds a steaming teacup on her knee, a whiff of lavender rising from it. My Queen does not smile as She looks down at me. Her face radiates wizened beauty but Her wintry eyes run me through.
 

She says, “Confess.”

 
“Queen-Minister,” I begin, trying to keep the quiver from my voice. “I fear I’m failing you.” I cannot deflect or lie to Her. Swallowing the bitterness this leaves on my tongue, I continue, “Lately I feel my sisters have been surpassing me. Sometimes I know what I did wrong, but other times, I don’t…” I need a breath to steady myself. “I don’t understand how I failed. I carry out my duties. I serve as I always have. Yet I feel myself slipping, and it… Troubles me, Queen-Minister.”
 

She takes a long sip from her tea. “It troubles me as well, Lakera.”

 
My heart sinks.
 

The Proxy comes to us and hands my Queen several papers. Reaching past me to set Her cup on the table, She accepts them and begins to read. “Families burning their own furniture for firewood as winter approaches.” She shuffles to the next page. “People catching rats and birds for food.” Next page. “The Engineering Corp fitting trains with new engines that run on shit because we’re low on coal.” She peers over the papers down at me, eyes severe. “Cratavn is an island, Lakera. We are running out of space, and running out of resources. We cannot afford failure.”

 
I wither, each story a stone falling onto my back, breaking it vertebrae by vertebrae. “I’m sorry, Queen-Minister, I’ll do better, I’ll…”
 

“And now I have you,” She cuts in, “pouncing on your sisters in the showers.” She lowers the papers to fix me with Her full attention. It’s an avalanche barrelling towards me. “We must expand. We must take back the world outside. I need your choir to do this.”

 
Overwhelmed, I lower my face to the floor. For a confused moment, resentment grips me. Have Getye or Imeshan been berated like this lately? Has Brea? Both times I’ve knelt before my Queen recently, She’s chastised me. Why am I singled out?
 

No, this thought is heresy. Questioning Her is heresy. My Queen expects more of me because I was better. She must believe I can be again.

 
With a long exhale, She hands the papers back to the Proxy and takes Her cup for another sip. “I need you, Lakera.” She slips the toe of Her boot under my chin, the silver toe cap cool against my skin, and tilts my head up to meet Her gaze. “So, I offer you absolution.”
 

My breath catches.

 
“I have a special assignment for you,” She says. “You are not to tell your sisters. Only the three of us can know.”
 

I nod. “Yes, Queen-Minister. Whatever you wish.”

 
“In three days, your choir will be deployed to the Ghost Forest, southeast of here. We have reason to believe the Host will be launching a major assault there soon. You are to help fight this off.” She slips a photograph out of her coat and holds it out to me. “And while you’re there, I want you to look for this.”
 

I lean in to examine it. The slanting lip of a dark grey ridge covers the bottom half while the upper half is blinding white sky. It takes me a moment to notice the shape standing between them. It’s a lighter grey, blending in somewhat with the sky, but I discern its tall figure.

 
I lean closer.
 

Perhaps it’s the graininess, or the slight blur suggesting the photographer had taken this in a hurry. But the thing looks to be wearing a hooded white overcoat. If not for its inhumanly lanky proportions, one could almost mistake it for the Proxy. Scrawled in ink along the blank white sky is the heading, “Hierophant - River Jeshein”.

 
“Yes,” says the Queen-Minister, brushing a fingertip down Her double’s sleeve. “It looks like her, doesn’t it?” She withdraws the photograph. “That’s why it concerns me. I worry the Host are getting more clever.”
 

To me, it’s more than concerning. Every so often a new Host variant will emerge, some fresh horror we’ll have to adapt to as we encounter it. The seraphim were the worst for a while. But this creature’s mimicry disturbs me in a different way. Impersonating the Proxy feels like a deliberate and targeted affront.

 
The Queen-Minister sets the toe of her boot against my mask. “This does not mean I want you rushing off after our new friend here, Lakera. It stays behind enemy lines, perhaps acting as a kind of commanding officer. You are not to unduly endanger yourself or your sisters. I only want you to observe it and report any findings to me when you return. Understood?”
 

“Yes, Queen-Minister,” I say.

 
“That’s good, Lakera.” She extends her boot to stroke my cheek with the smooth leather. “Perhaps you’ll be my sweet angel again soon, hm?”
 

I can almost imagine it’s Her hand on my skin, Her soft palm and loving caress. I nuzzle into it as if it were. “Yes, Queen-Minister.”

 
At long last, She smiles down at me. It’s like the first sunrise of Spring. “Very good.”
 

***

 
Three days later we board a train, just as the Queen-Minister stated. I hadn’t doubted Her when She said that some trains had been refit to run on waste. Her every word is truth. Still, it took having the putrid reek of our ride’s exhaust singing my nose for three days for the reality to set in.
 

Cratavn is not entirely an island. After years of fighting- only a few of which my choir has partaken in- its armies have driven back a little of the rot. A day into the train ride, we spot a small lumber camp set up behind chain link fences and watchtowers, harvesting the scattered stands of birches or oaks. In the past we’ve glimpsed similar small, guarded mining operations closer to the mountains in the northwest. There’s efforts to reach the Osceller Coast in hopes of reclaiming the eastern ocean’s bounty, as well. From what little we hear, however, the Coast remains out of reach. These lumber and mining camps are a start. But they alone will not keep the desperate beast of Cratavn fed.

 
One could cut the air of the front with a knife, due both to the pervasive stink of waste and burning meat, and the tension. The buildings of a ruined hamlet have been cleared of flesh-growth and restored as lodging for the reserve troops, between which weaves a trail of soldiers lined up for the breakfast tent. Others sit in scattered groups, playing cards or mumbling to each other or just smoking in silence. We skirt along the edge of the camp, trying to remain discrete.
 

A small dugout has been reserved for us, occupied by a few small cots and a table crowded with an arrangement of ceremonial candles. As we settle, soldiers carry in the wooden crates containing our weapons and armor, as well as a smaller box holding flasks of ambrosia. We must feed at least once a week, and we can no more prey on soldiers of Cratavn than haul the ambrosia tanks here with us. The flasks sustain us until we return home.

 
Not long after we arrive there’s a knock on the door, and the Proxy leaves to see to whatever business. Without her, there isn’t much to help us pass the time. We lounge about in our undersuits, dozing in the warm light of the candles. Getye and Imeshan are nestled together in a corner, Imeshan toying with Getye’s shaggy dirty blonde hair. They often distract themselves like this, preening and playing with each other. Why does the Proxy tolerate it?
 

My eyes wander to Brea, who picks at a loose thread in the shoulder of her suit. I wonder if what Getye and Imeshan have is a version of what I attempted in the showers. That action taken to its logical conclusion, in which one submits to the other. It’s hard then not to imagine Brea’s lithe body curled against mine, her face turned down in silent defeat, letting me run my nails over her scalp. All her skill and smugness, yielding as I assert myself as her better. I start to harden.

 
The door creaks open.
 

We all perk up, expecting the Proxy. Except that isn’t who it is. Leaning in through the half-open doorway, face dumb with surprise, is a young woman with green eyes and a stubby sandy brown ponytail sticking out from under her helmet.

 
For a moment, awkward silence. Then she inches the rest of the way into the room, her face settling into a hopeful smile. “You’re here,” she says, voice a breathless whisper. “I heard someone say they saw you arrive, but people have been saying lots of things lately, and…” She trails off with a nervous giggle. “I had to see. Just in case, yeah?”
 

Hearing her voice, I realize I’ve come across her before. The girl in the truck, en route to the Bone Factory.

 
Getye disentangles herself from Imeshan and approaches our visitor.
 

Truck Girl watches her come with a kind of hesitant excitement. Tense, as if she’s ready to bolt at any moment, yet she stays. “I, um…” Lips twitching with half-formed words. “I wanted to see you all again. Before anything happens.”

 
Brea and I rise next. Only Imeshan remains in the corner. What could our visitor be doing here? The Proxy would have told us if we were getting a reward. But what would the reward be for? This is our first deployment in almost two months.
 

The girl’s head snaps between us. There’s a light dusting of freckles across her nose and cheeks, though dark bags have begun to form beneath her eyes as the front takes its toll on her. “Some of the others pray to you and the Goddess,” she goes on. “You know, for protection. I thought if I did it in person, it might…?” Again she trails off as we crowd around her, a slight blush blooming in her cheeks.

 
We all find a different aspect of her to examine. Getye her green uniform, now bearing the ubiquitous stains of trench life, Brea her tense shoulders, and I her face. She’s pretty, with those faint freckles and that bashful glow painted around her green eyes. I wonder how beautiful she’d be in submission. Face slack with empty bliss. A pliable shell with a warm, inviting soul waiting inside for once we’ve spent her.
 

But she isn’t for us. The Proxy hasn’t said so.

 
“So I wanted to, um…” Truck Girl blinks hard, as if our presence is difficult for her to bear. “I just wanted to pray. If that’s alright.”
 

Our answer is a curious stare.

 
“Okay.” She lowers herself to one knee, placing her helmet on the floorboards beside her and folding her hands upon her raised leg. She takes in a long breath then, closes her eyes, and bows her head.
 

“Silver light of dawn,” she begins, “please reach me through this long night.” Her voice is so quiet, meant only for ears which hear all. “I ask the Silver Goddess and you, her angels, for protection in the battles ahead. I ask not for glory nor blood, only that I live to return home. I do not need, nor want any more.” Her voice shakes for a moment, rises as her resolve wavers. She pauses to compose herself. “Pa got sick just before I deployed. He can’t work the farm like he used to, and the cows aren’t gonna wait for him. Danie does what she can, but there’s only two of them. We don’t have money to hire help. We don’t know what we’re gonna do.”

 
A long, shuddering breath escapes her. “I wanted to pray for them at first. You know, for some kinda help to fall into their lap. Then I got thinking, if I make it home, I can be that help. So then I wanted to pray for myself. And then, thinking about it more, I had to be honest. I’m… I’m scared, angels. I don’t want to die. I don’t even want to fight. I don’t want to be here at all. But I know that I have to be. So, I ask for your protection.”
 

There’s little we can do for her. If we come across her in no-man’s land, will we protect her? For a moment, if it won’t interfere with our orders, yes, we will. Only for that moment, though. Only for those few extra breaths.

 
“Please,” she says, her voice withering again. “Please, Silver Goddess and her angels. Help my family if you can. Help Pa get better and keep Danie out of trouble. Protect me, because I’m scared and they need me. Please.”
 

I kneel with her. Perhaps we’d be able to pull a few words together, if we could speak freely. We’ll protect you if we can, little one. Or perhaps we’d let our thoughts stray to the fact that we haven’t soaked in the ambrosia tanks since the morning before we left. We’re not hungry yet. We do have the ambrosia flasks. But I can hear the girl’s heart pounding in her chest.

 
I brush my fingertips over her hair. It’s oily and dishevelled, and she flinches under my touch. But, very slowly, she raises her face to mine. She glows with pure awe, as if seeing the dawn for the first time.
 

“Th-Thank you,” she says.

 
Behind my mask, I salivate. You would be so radiant, little one.
 

The door swings open again. This time it is the Proxy, glowering down at the girl. We all assemble into a line, sitting prettily for our guiding star, as Truck Girl spins around and clambers to her feet. She notices she’s left her helmet on the floor, and snatches it up to set back atop her head. “Officer,” she blurts, giving a quick salute. “Ma’am, I was just...”

 
The Proxy’s eyes shift past to us, sitting in our row. She takes a long two steps into the room, until she looms inches from our guest. “You wanted to see the angels.”
 

Truck Girl gives a quick, guilty nod. “Yes, ma’am.”

 
The Proxy hums in thought. “Do you know what they are, Private? Really?”
 

Truck girl has nothing to say for a moment. “They’re… The servants of the Silver Goddess. Sent down to help us. Aren’t they, ma’am?”

 
“Close.” Setting a hand on the girl’s shoulders, the Proxy turns her around to see us, kneeling in our tidy row. The sight sends a few emotions shifting in sequence across her face. Confusion. Discomfort. Something else.
 

“Well, Private?” the Proxy asks. Patient, but no warmer than a winter night.

 
“They’re…” The girl turns her head as if to look away but her eyes remain on us. “They’re soldiers?”
 

The Proxy gives a mirthless chuckle. “Not as close.”

 
She’s not supposed to be here. Perhaps the Proxy will give her to us as punishment? I fix my eyes on the girl, trying to catch her full attention. I like it when it’s my face they see, when I become the last fixture in their world. The woman in grey’s soul is long gone, along with the pleasant numbness I felt from devouring her.
 

The girl’s shoulders are almost at her ears. “I don’t know then, ma’am.”

 
“If you were hoping to find miracles here, Private,” the Proxy replies, “you will be disappointed. If you’re caught intruding again, however, there may be a court martial in your future.” She releases the girl. “Leave.”
 

Ducking her head, the girl hurries out.

The Proxy turns back to us, an irate cast darkening her eyes. “If anyone else wanders in here,” she orders, “throw them out.”
 
***
 
Our timing was good. The bombardment begins early the next morning.
 

We, in our shelter behind the trenches, are spared the shelling. Even so we feel it tremor through the earth at all hours, the grinding percussion of it battering the defenses. We also hear the wailing of injured soldiers on their way to the field hospitals. Our chance to avenge these losses will come. For now we wait with the Proxy, who leads us in prayer and song. The music competes with that constant rumble of thunder, just a mile or so away, but we feel the hymns in our veins.

 
The shelling drags on for four days. Its length is meant to break down both our physical defenses and the resolve of the soldiers holding them. When it finally stops one dark overcast morning, the pause brings no relief. The enemy will charge soon. We put on our armor and load our SMGs and sidearms, and kneel as the Proxy pours a small cup of argen wine for each of us. It’s sharp and tart, with a bitter aftertaste which lingers uncomfortably on the tongue. A reminder of the danger of the battle to come, and the damnation which may follow should we fail.
 

We embark into the trenches. As always they reek of offal and smoke, especially once we reach the ruin of the forward trench. Whole sections of the parapet have been smashed in, spilling reddish mud and sandbags onto the duckboards, which throngs of exhausted soldiers work to push back up. The damp soil shifts under their boots and they make little progress. At one point we pass a collapsed dugout, pushing yet more muck into the narrow passage. A furrow gouged into the heap suggests the troops had needed to dig someone out of it.

 
Fortunately, the machine gun and mortar nests have held, and many soldiers line the fire step, rifles and bugging eyes pointed between our barbed wire at the Ghost Forest itself, half a mile or so ahead. Going by its name, its trees must have always been as pale as they are now. They might not have always been so thin, however. From this distance they resemble the baleen lining a whale’s jaws, their white all the starker against the thick red flesh-growth blanketing their roots. We’re meant to capture the Forest so a new lumber camp can be established here. It’s hard to imagine these trees will do much against Cratavn’s wood shortage, but the city needs all it can get.
 

Four bolt action rifles stand propped against the front wall with clips waiting on the ammo shelf. “You’ll defend against their charge first,” the Proxy had explained on our way here. “Then you’ll lead the counter-charge.” Not our usual order of operations. I’ve heard us described as shock troops by the upper brass in Vandett Tower. We’re designed to attack, sharp arrows ready to spring from taut bows. But we are trained with the bolt actions, and if the Proxy commands us to defend, we will.

 
We take our places on the fire step, load our rifles, and set them on the sandbags, careful to keep our heads as low as we can without losing visibility. Ahead, the Ghost Forest’s canopy is thin and yellowing in the approaching autumn. The trees cluster tight together but movement will be easy to spot against their ivory trunks.
 

Then, suffocating silence, thick as the stench of wet rot in the cold air. It lingers until, very quietly, someone along the step begins to hum. Something jaunty and light. One by one, others join in. I hear Getye among them, her voice soaring airily over the rest.

 
Crack.
 

The first shot thumps into a sandbag further down the line. An officer bellows, “Charge coming,” but her voice is already half-buried beneath the return fire. I seek targets in the Forest’s shadows and find a wall of dark figures surging forward. Instead of the expected thin and misshapen shapes, these are mostly tall solid squares. Shields. The Host deploying their own shock troops? It makes no difference to the contempt roiling in my chest. I take aim at the ankles visible beneath a shield’s bottom edge. Once I pull the trigger, the creature falls like any other, ripe for the artillery to finish off.

 
Defense is a simple, brutish music. Find a target through the haze of smoke and debris. Aim. Fire. Work the bolt, reload if needed. Repeat. Every shot our choir takes cripples or kills. Our serenity holds. It’s our subtlest weapon, steadying our hands and solidifying our focus. Combat comes as easily as breath. Even as more and more foes emerge from the Forest and our mortars and machine guns join in, even as the constant rattle of ordinance drowns out my own heartbeat, I keep with the rhythm.
 

Wave after wave. Plumes of mud and meat. Broken bodies littering the cratered land. Thick dark blood drips from our wire, the enemy using both their shields and sheer numbers to get close. But eventually, once their dead cover the blasted earth, they stop emerging from the tree line. There’s no retreat. Those that had come keep on until we cut them down. Life holds no value to the great march of undeath. They simply stop coming.

 
Behind us the Proxy calls, “Are we ready?” Yes, Proxy. Then let us listen. The Hymn erupts from the trench, dragging our minds up with it. Go.
 

Swapping our rifles for the SMGs, we climb out and charge. The torn limbs and bodies half-buried in the rent earth do nothing to slow us. My sense reinvigorated, I scan the trees for fresh kills. An officer’s whistle blows next and the troops follow close behind. An unusual act of haste. Do they worry we four would be overwhelmed, even if nothing has before?

 
Or do they fear something else?
 

Damp leaves and flesh creep squelch under our boots as we enter the Ghost Forest. The land here divides itself into shallow gullies and small hills, the subtle lines and bulges of creeks and rocks buried by the rot visible here and there. A bullet snaps into a tree beside me and, unable to see the shooter yet, I duck into a gully. The troops aren’t so cautious, washing through in a mob driven by equal parts bravado and adrenaline, all wild eyes and ragged war cries. Following the gully I emerge to find thralls, no shields this time, firing up at them from what looks to be an old trench. With a focused hatred I mow the horrors down.

 
As I slaughter, small worries bite at me. Where are my sisters? Are they faring better than me? Where is the Hierophant? Was my Queen mistaken, and it isn’t here? Has it retreated? I watch the forest for gangly limbs and white coats but find only rotting flesh and green uniforms, falling in almost equal number between the trees. Seething, I destroy two of the former for each of the latter.
 

But I can’t forget. If I don’t find the Hierophant, would She still absolve me?

 
Killing. Pushing. Deeper. I step over almost as many allies as I do Host. Then I come upon a small group of soldiers huddled behind a fallen tree, pinned down by the swarm coming down the hillside a short distance ahead. Getye is with them. I slide down under the hail of fire to take a spot next to her, and she and I take turns popping up over the trunk to return at the Host. They advance steadily down the slope, sticking to the trees for what cover they give. But with two Virtues in their path now, their progress slows.
 

Beside us one of the soldiers wails, pulling their helmet down over their rictused face. It happens at most battles, the weight of it simply crushing one or two of them. They’re mice sent to do a lioness’s work. A handful of their fellows lay at the foot of the hill. My loathing surges and I make sure to hit the next thrall I fire on. The abomination convulses as the three bullet burst perforates its center of mass and it crumples down the hill.

 
And lands between a pair of bloodied bodies stiffly hauling themselves to their feet.
 

I duck back down, and find Getye has as well. We exchange a glance. Did we see that? A choking cry from one of the infantrymen answers my question. “It’s Burkam! Burkam’s up, he’s ali—!” A rifle shot cuts the man off, his body thrown back onto the earth, a wine red ruin where his left eye had been.

 
I peer up again to find the pale, filth-stained faces of dead Cratavn soldiers among the mass now approaching us. We fire into the mob, and it starts to thin them for a moment before another two corpses rise to join.
 

That’s when I spot it, atop the hill. It’s as tall and slender as the photograph suggested, perhaps seven feet in height. I might have noticed it sooner did it not blend in somewhat with the trees. Long folds of white fabric do hang like a trench coat from its body, stained with grey and brown. What the photographs couldn’t show is its cream-coloured hide, like an exoskeleton of bone, nor the metallic ball joints in its limbs, nor the second pair of arms reaching out from its coat, fingers twitching as if to puppeteer the dead. What grabs my eye, however, is its face. From this distance, it looks almost human. Almost like a woman. It’s too stiff, though. A doll’s face, obscured in the shadow of its hood.

 
A sickly mixture of excitement and dread boils in my chest. The Hierophant is here, after all.
 

It reaches down towards me, unfurling delicate fingers which end in wicked hooks. It’s almost inviting. Cold but not inhospitable. For a delirious moment, I want to go to it. To feel those hooked fingertips tickling beneath my chin, lifting my face to look up into its dark eyes.

 
Splinters fly into my face as a bullet hits my cover.
 

I turn and retreat. All my Queen requested was that I observe the creature. The soldiers fled moments ago, even Getye runs ahead of me. Cries of “Fall back” echo through the trees. Catching up to my sister, she and I dart through the Forest together, the world alive with hissing bullets and dying wails and the reek of blood and guns.

 
Getye gasps and falls.
 

Stumbling as I try to turn around, I hurry back to her. She’s crawling to catch up to me, but there’s three bullet holes in the armor of her back, oozing rose gold blood.

 
My stomach drops. This doesn’t happen. We are the lionesses. The unfailing weapons of the Queen-Minister. We don’t get shot.
 

I help Getye to her feet and pull her along with me. She struggles to keep pace. Scooping her up into my arms, I carry her that way. She’s not large even in her armor and I’m strong, but even so, she feels too light. Wrapping her arm around my neck, she curls into my chest. Screaming lead pursues us but the forest’s edge is close. Hold on, sister.

 
Please, hold on, sister.

Thanks so much for reading, hope you're enjoying the story so far! Also, if you want more of this world you can check out the side story The Killing Hymn: Be Not Afraid!


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