Page 20
Story: Ugly: The Stepsister's Story
A band of angry locals had come out of the trees around the trail bend and attacked the wagon train. Armed with clubs, bows and arrows, and torches, men had begun to strike down the wagon train drivers, pull supplies out of the wagons, or else set everything on fire. Curtis and I saw them coming down the line toward us.
Panic set in. I saw the men coming but was frozen with fear. Should I run? Get my bow and arrows? Try to reason with the horde of men? But this band seemed beyond reasoning. Terrified, I looked at Curtis beside me. He had reined in his horse close to a wagon, and was reaching behind the headboard for his weapons.
He saw me rooted to the saddle, paralyzed by indecision, and yelled, “Don’t stay here, Truly! Go! Go get the guards!”
I wheeled my horse about, but more men had poured out from the trees behind us. We were trapped. I knew the guards must be close, but there was no way to reach them. Or were they all dead by now?
Screams tore at the air, and it was these anguished cries that jolted me into action. I reached down and pulled up my bow and arrows, the ones I thought I would never need to use. Curtis, now at my back, needed what little protection I could offer.
I loaded my bow. “Stay back, or I will shoot!” I called in Avivian to the oncoming men. They saw me, and didn’t stop, but continued straight toward me. I called once more, praying they would obey, but to no avail. I squeezed my eyes shut, hating what I had to do.
I began firing my arrows. I only had time enough for a few arrows, and knew I had to make each one count. In a panic, I released them as quickly as I could, trying to protect myself, Curtis, and the unarmed wagon train driver next to me. I hit three of the men, and two other arrows missed. By now, the crowd of angry men were closing in fast. After my last arrow hissed away, I wanted to retreat, but to where? We were surrounded. One of the men waved a torch and Storm, terrified, reared back wildly. I was thrown from her back and landed hard on the ground. I covered my head with my arms as Storm’s hooves pounded away.
One man with a scar down his face pulled me up by my hair. “Islandrian scum,” he growled in my ear, and yanked me back toward the group of attackers. My eyes watered with pain as the scarred man dragged me over to a nearby tree and slammed me into it. Stars popped in front of my eyes as I blinked furiously to clear my head.
“Leave her alone!” I heard Curtis cry out.
I tried fiercely to break free of the man’s grasp, but he was far stronger than I was. My efforts did no more than amuse him as he roughly tied me to a tree. Looking beyond him, I saw the wagon train driver laying on the ground, several arrows protruding from his body and blood pooling around his unmoving body. I screwed my eyes shut, trying to block out the scarring image, then wretched as my insides heaved their contents forward, spattering the scarred man’s boots.
Leaping back in disgust, the man pulled a torch from one of his comrades and approached me with a nasty smile spreading slowly over his face. “Let’s teach this Islandrian a lesson, boys!” he called to the group at large. The men gave up a sickening cheer. My entire body was tied tightly to the tree, and I couldn’t move anything other than my head.
I screamed over and over. I simultaneously wanted the others to get to safety, but also for the guards, Father, Curtis, anyone to come save me from the scarred face leering sickly over me. A harsh, strong slap to my face broke through my thoughts and made me gasp for air as I felt the side of my head beginning to swell from the force used.
“Nobody is here to save you, lassie,” the man growled. “They will all be dead soon. You too.”
My brain raced in overdrive as I felt panic begin to take over my body, overwhelming my senses. I forced my eyes forward, refusing to look at the driver’s dead body. I knew it was only a matter of time before they killed me too. Would they torture me first?
“Guards! Over here!” I screamed out suddenly, defiantly, hoping my voice would lead them to me, scare my attackers, anything. Why? Why didn’t we keep the guards right with us? Why were we stupid enough to think that not having guards would make us seem more friendly? Of course it would put a target onto us!
The scarred man slapped me again, even harder than before. Blood began trickling from my mouth, and the bark of the tree I was tied to scratched the side of my head as I was hit.
“Got a feisty one, eh Garrit?” another man, squat with a droopy eyelid, came loping from the group over to the scarred man. The squat man grinned evilly, revealing a mouth full of jagged, broken, and blackened teeth. “She is a pretty one, this lass!” he leered at me. He was too close. I could smell his putrid breath. “Got a kiss for me, sweet?”
I spat into his face.
Several other men were gathering around the scarred face man and the squat man with broken teeth now. They laughed as the squat man wiped my blood and saliva from his face. “Alright boys, who wants to have some fun?” the scarred man yelled.
A cheer that turned my stomach went up, as the men began coming closer, wielding clubs, torches, swords, and other weapons.
“Help!” I screamed frantically, desperately. “Help! Someone help! Help me!”
I was slapped again and this time, someone from behind me yanked my hair painfully so I couldn’t even move my head.
Even over the roaring in my ears, I could hear Curtis shouting “No! No, No! Truly!”
“Curtis!” I screamed back, unable to see anything but the mass of foul-smelly bodies pressing forward.
The squat man chuckled softly and said, “No help is coming missy. Is that your boyfriend? We will take care of him in just a minute. Just after we take care of you.” Then I saw the scarred man approaching, bringing with him the burning torch.
Nearer and nearer he came, leering as he tauntingly waved the flaming branch in front of my face as a roar of approval came up from the men gathered around. I could feel the heat radiating off the torch and knew what my captor planned to do.
“Shame that your boyfriend won’t have a pretty face to look at anymore,” he leered, indicating the torch’s dancing light. “Not that you are long for this world anyway.”
I pulled against my unyielding bonds as much as I could, desperate to get away from the insufferable heat. As much I was trying to hold them back, tears began to slowly leak out of my eyes. My head was filled with a high-pitched whine of panic as I began to hyperventilate.
I knew it was coming, but that didn’t help at all. It made it worse. Time seemed to slow down. The scarred man held the hungry flame against my face.
The agony was indescribable. Every fiber of my body seemed to explode in protest of the blazing fire against my face. I tried to pull my head away from the flames, yanking against my bonds as hard as I could, but the men only laughed and kept the torch on my skin.
Table of Contents
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- Page 20 (Reading here)
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- Page 63