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The First Terror
Author: Kaurick
last update2025-09-24 15:26:38

Ethan burst from the forest into the cottage's warm circle of light, his breath coming in ragged gasps. Tears streaked his face, and his small body shook with terror that no eight-year-old should ever feel.

Lila was tending her drying herbs on the porch when she heard his footsteps. She turned with a welcoming smile that died the instant her eyes found him.

Her gaze locked onto his left hand, bare, pale, and deadly in the moonlight.

"Ethan, stop!" The words exploded from her lips with such force that he stumbled to a halt several paces away. "Don't move! Don't you dare move another step!"

He stood frozen where she'd commanded, his whole body trembling like a leaf in a storm. The sight of his mother's face white with shock, eyes wide with the kind of fear he'd never seen there before broke something inside him.

"Ma," he sobbed, "I didn't mean to."

"The glove," Lila whispered, her voice barely audible. Her hands pressed against her heart as if trying to keep it from bursting. "Where is the glove?"

His right hand fumbled at his pocket, pulling out the crumpled black leather. The moment she saw it, relief and fury warred across her face in equal measure.

"You removed it." She breathed the words like a prayer, then louder, anger crackling in her voice: "You took it off! How could you? We told you."

Her words cut off as a new realization struck her. If the glove was in his pocket, and he'd been running through the forest with his bare hand exposed...

Before she could call out, the sound of heavy footsteps came crashing through the undergrowth. Marlin Gust burst from the forest path, his hunting clothes still damp from the lake, his face tight with urgency. He moved like a man who had felt something wrong in the very air itself.

"What happened?" he demanded, his eyes immediately finding Ethan's bare hand. "I felt... something died in the forest."

When he saw Ethan standing motionless in the yard small, terrified, and holding his cursed hand away from his body like a venomous snake, Marlin's expression shifted into something Ethan had never seen before. Not anger, not fear, but a deep, ancient sadness that seemed to age him years in a single heartbeat.

"Son," Marlin said quietly, approaching with the careful steps of a man approaching a wounded animal. "Tell me what happened."

The gentleness in his father's voice shattered the dam holding back Ethan's words. They poured out in a flood of guilt and terror:

"I didn't mean to!" he sobbed. "I just... I wanted to see! The tree... it just... and the rabbit..." His words dissolved into hiccupping sobs. "I killed it, Da! I killed it and I don't know why!"

"Easy, lad. Easy." Marlin knelt before him, close enough to touch but not quite reaching. "Breathe with me. In... and out. There."

"But I killed them," Ethan whispered, fresh tears streaming down his cheeks. "I'm a monster, aren't I?"

Something flickered across Marlin's face, a look that spoke of burdens carried and secrets kept. For a moment, he seemed to weigh invisible scales, measuring words that could change everything.

"You're not a monster," he said finally. "You're my son."

Marlin gently took the glove from Ethan's trembling right hand. As he moved toward Ethan's bare left hand to put the glove back on, the boy jerked his cursed hand further away from his father.

"No!" Ethan cried. "Don't touch it! It's cursed! I'll kill you too!"

For a moment that stretched like an eternity, father and son stared at each other across a chasm of fear and love. Then, with deliberate slowness, Marlin reached out and grasped Ethan's left hand in his own weathered palm.

Nothing happened.

Marlin's skin remained warm and living. His eyes stayed bright. His pulse continued steady and strong where Ethan could feel it through his fingers.

Ethan's mouth fell open. "But... how? Why didn't you...?"

"Because," Marlin said softly, his voice carrying weight that an eight-year-old couldn't fully understand, "sometimes the things we fear most about ourselves are not the whole truth."

With gentle efficiency, he worked the glove back onto Ethan's hand, sealing it at the wrist with practiced motions. The familiar weight of the leather felt like absolution and prison all at once.

"How are you not dead?" Ethan asked, his voice small and wondering.

Marlin's hands stilled for just a moment. When he looked up, his eyes held depths that seemed older than his years. "That's a story for another time, son. When you're ready to understand it all."

"Did anyone see you?" he asked instead, his tone carefully neutral.

Ethan shook his head. "No. I was alone in the forest."

Relief flickered in Marlin's eyes. "Good. Listen to me carefully, Ethan. That glove must never come off again. Never. Do you understand? It's not punishment, it's protection. For you and for everyone else."

Before Ethan could ask the hundred questions burning in his throat, Lila was there, falling to her knees and pulling him into a fierce embrace that smelled of herbs and desperate love.

"Why did you do that?" she whispered against his hair, her voice breaking. "Do you know what could have happened if someone had seen you? If they knew what you..." She couldn't finish the sentence, but held him tighter instead. "Promise me, Ethan. Promise me you'll never remove it again."

"I promise," he choked out, meaning it with every fiber of his being. "I promise, Ma. I'm sorry. I'm so sorry."

She rocked him as she had when he was small, murmuring comfort in the old tongue of Kyros until his sobs quieted to shuddering breaths. When he finally grew still in her arms, she lifted him—still so small despite everything—and carried him inside.

His bed felt like a sanctuary. Lila tucked the surrounding blankets with infinite care, smoothing his hair away from his horn and pressing a kiss to his forehead.

"Ma?" Ethan's voice was muffled by exhaustion and tears. "Why didn't Da die when he touched my hand? What's different about him?"

Lila's hand paused in his hair for the briefest moment. When she spoke, her voice was carefully measured. "Your father is... special, little bird. Just as you are. Sleep now. Tomorrow we'll talk more."

But even as she said it, they both knew that wasn't true. Tomorrow would bring the same careful silences, the same half-truths wrapped in love.

When Ethan's breathing finally deepened into exhausted sleep, Lila slipped from his room to find Marlin sitting heavily at their kitchen table. His hands rested flat on the worn wood, and she could see the faint tremor in his fingers, the only sign of what touching Ethan's cursed flesh had truly cost him.

"Are you all right?" she asked, settling into the chair beside him. Her healer's instincts made her reach for his hands, already sensing the damage that lay beneath his calm exterior.

Marlin looked up at her, and for a moment his careful mask slipped. She saw the weight he carried, the knowledge that pressed on him like stones, and something else, a flicker of uncertainty that hadn't been there before.

"I'm fine, love," he said quietly, flexing his fingers as if testing them. "But his power... it's growing faster than we expected. Each time it gets stronger."

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