Starting a Game of Hyde and Seek

Story by StGeorgesHorse on SoFurry

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#101 of The Moonrise Chronicles

So the people have spoken. Sigh. Here you go all you vocal voters - more of Maggie and Edward. Just be forewarned that the story has taken a dark turn, as I hope you have come to expect.


                The fog

and mists shrouded the seas for leagues in all directions. The dull slap of

waves hitting the rusted metal hull provided a auditory backdrop that was

devoid of recognizable sound. The ship was far out to sea, lost in the

moisture-laden air. The situation was even more eerie in that there was absolutely

no one aboard this liner.

None but two.

                One lay

on the deck, near death. His injuries were deadly by anyone's standards and yet

he still lived.

                One sat

atop the highest crow's nest above the control room. Wings outstretched, she

sat in silent vigil over the waters, her ears alert for the slightest sound.

Now and again the distant cry of a gull or other oceangoing bird could be heard

faintly across the waves, but overall silence shrouded the ship as effectively

as did the ghostly vapors.

                Her

wings, still bloodied along the edges from where they had tore away from her

body, dripped with red-tinged moisture. They were never meant to be used and

abused in such a reckless fashion, most importantly not for her first flight.

But what choice did she have? Now she relished the cool North Sea air which did

much to comfort them. Maggie was a tough little scrapper, but falling from

seven miles up and then saving what was left of Edward had taken its toll.

                There

were it seemed, limits to their abilities after all.

                Edward

was lying in a congealed pool of his own blood. His left arm was missing right

up to the shoulder. He was a grizzly sight to behold. And the cause of all this

harm? Hyde was unaccounted for. She could hope he had drowned, but she felt it

in her bones that wishing for that eventuality was a fool's request. The man

was too filled with hate to die so easily.

                At least

he had not made it to their present hideout. It didn't mean he wouldn't find

it, but for now they seemed safe enough.

                The

name on the ship, strangely enough, was in English, though the name was

Russian. She had no idea what or who Lyubov Orlova was, or why this ship,

marked as belonging to Cruise North Expeditions, was floating along like a ghost

ship. She had done a preliminary search and found the entire thing deserted.

There didn't even seem to be any cockroaches on board, or rats, or any sign of

life. How someone could lose a ship this size was mind boggling. How long had

this thing been adrift?

                Locating

it had only been by happenstance. She had been losing strength in flying Edward

to someplace solid. To find a place of safety seemed to be too much to ask, but

this ship answered her call. Her wailing cries in the night seemed to bounce

off of something besides endless sea, and she had homed in on it unerringly.

                The

droplets of dew now collected on her skin and ran in rivulets down her flanks

to the deck, leaving narrow paths in their wake. They might as well have been

tears for all she cared. Edward was in bad shape, and outside of her ring on his

finger, there was nothing she could do to help him. He was a mess of sundered

parts, broken bones and smashed flesh.

                Hyde

was still out there, somewhere in that gaping expanse of black ocean. Edward

and he had battled in the air, heedless of the fact that they were falling to

their doom. Edward had underestimated the sheer hatred contained within

Stevenson's dark side. The man was easier to avoid and handle on something

solid, but here in the air, with the clouds swirling around them, the battle

had taken a darker turn. In the end, Edward had nearly been completely beaten.

                That was

where Maggie came in. She didn't know if it was the stress of the situation or

what, but she knew she needed something to give her an edge. Wings weren't even

in her mind at the time, not that she consciously remembered much of what was

going through her gray matter as she was falling. All she knew was that she had

to reach them and somehow pull them apart.

                It was

at that moment that her body was wracked with pain. Her back writhed and tore

loose. Heretofore nonexistent or simply unmodified bones stretched out to grant

her her birthright. The wind tore at them and she was suddenly watching the two

men disappearing into the darkness. She wasn't flying, but her increased rag

was slowing her down. She instinctively drew the wings in and dropped like a

stone. She'd worry about the details of flying later.

                The air

flowing over her raw flesh helped to alleviate some of the pain, and focusing

on her intended target made bearing the rest doable, if nauseating. Her eyes

were far sharper than a normal humans and now they seemed especially so. She

folded everything about her into as streamlined a shape as possible and felt

like every hair on her head was going to tear out.

                But she

caught up with them. The sea was far below, but getting ever closer. If they

hit it, the impact would likely kill them instantly. Physics was not to be

denied. At the speed they were falling, the impact would crush their tissues.

                That's

when the arm flew past her head. It was obvious that Edward was in trouble;

deep, deep trouble. He might have the strength to fight off Hyde, but he had

too much compassion to do a proper job. Hyde on the other hand lived for the

mayhem and destruction and he had promised to kill Edward if he got the chance.

Falling through the air was likely only making him more manically violent.

                She

plummeted as fast as she could, stretching out her arms and growing some very

wicked looking talons from her fingertips. They weren't just claws, but

scimitar shaped blades with only one purpose. The air buffeted her eyes, making

vision difficult, so she said a little prayer and honed in using her other senses.

Her ears seemed up for the task, despite the wind rushing past them.

                She

landed in the middle of them and in a flash her claws struck out, striking her

foe in the neck. Blood spurted in all directions, but as her eyes were still

shut, she wasn't blinded by it. She howled like a harpy and dug her talons in

again. He bellowed and let loose of Edward, who slowly began to tumble

away.  With once last stab she kicked

Hyde in the opposite direction and flew to Edward.

                It

wasn't all that simple, but she managed to grasp him before the ocean raced up

to swallow them both. Gritting her teeth, she opened her wings and braced for

impact. There was nothing but the sound of Edward's back paws trailing through

the water. But she heard the crash of another, equally large mass hitting the

surface with a sickening kerchunk. She smiled in grim satisfaction and flapped

slowly along, wondering where they were at and when she might find land.

                The

ship had loomed up just in the nick of time, and she used the last of her energies

to get him up on the deck. She didn't give a damn what anyone thought of such a

combination hitting their precious little boat. She would muster the needed willpower

to fight off an army if it was necessary. But there was no army, no first mate,

and no passengers. The ship was a floating heap, a wreck lost from some port or

another, or worse, a place where everyone had died mysteriously. She hardly

cared for the moment, but she did do a quick survey to confirm they were alone.

                They

were.

                She

flew to his side, wanting to cry but holding it in. It wouldn't help him one

bit. She slid off her ring, the only thing she was wearing besides the vial

around her neck, and stuck it on his mangled finger. He was wearing his, which

somehow had miraculously remained in place. But his body needed more than

simple healing.

 It was a wreck and a ruin.

                She leaned

down and kissed him. "There isn't much I can do for you lover boy. You took on

more than you bargained for and paid the price. It isn't the first time and I

hope it won't be the last."

                With

her lips touching him, she sensed his mind. It was roiling in pain, but a few

words came through clearly. "No? Why

not?"

                "Because stupid, that would mean

that you were dead. You can't go dying on me now."

                If he had anything more to

say he kept it to himself. She stood, wiping away a tear despite her resolve

and flew to a higher point from where she could look out over the ocean. The

vial was beginning to burn her skin, so she removed the chain and held it out

at arm's length. She made as if to throw it, but refrained from doing so for

the moment. She settled down for a long watch and that was where she remained.

She took the time to try to get her wings to go fold back in; for she had seen

The Kindred do it. Whatever the trick was, she didn't have it.

                After a

while she used them to wrap her torso, keeping some of the incessant mists away

from her. She was cold, but she was feeling that the sensation had more to do

with the possibility of losing Edward again than the cold North Sea air. He

might as well be dead considering the extent of his injuries. But his mind was still

in there so there was hope for the rest of him. She laughed grimly to herself. The

rest of him... He was missing parts. She was morbidly curious to see if he could

grow back an entire limb.

                After a

while, she walked cautiously down the steps until she made it to the inside of

the ship. Her nails clicked and clacked along the way. The captain's control

room was a corroded mess, and nothing on it had obviously worked on it in a

while. Down in the hold, she searched the area until she found the galley.  The refrigeration units had been

nonfunctional for what had to be years, but the shelves did have a supply of

rusted cans. Since they weren't bulging, it meant that whatever was inside them

was still edible. That was good.

                There

were a few rooms that still had beds, and she mentally mapped the area she had

just been in for future reference. She didn't want to move him just yet, not

until his body had pieced itself together a little more. He had said once that

a body, even theirs, couldn't make something from nothing, though she wondered

about that. How the hell did they manage to bulk up from their normal forms? If

that wasn't magic, then she didn't know what was.

But it happened, so there was that,

and one couldn't argue with the facts.

She returned to her perch, glad

that some vestige of the sun was trying very hard to break through the thick

veil that obstructed her view. She had hopes that when the fog had cleared

there would be some sort of landmass nearby.

She was sorely disappointed when

none was visible. Still, there was food and shelter on this ship, if not much

else. On the other hand, if it was out here floating, and for more than just a

little while, then the chances of anyone noticing them was slim to none.

From her perspective the ship

seemed to be motionless, in regards to its surroundings, but the fact was, it

was moving ever so slowly. Ocean currents were moving it along, carrying it

with it until such time as it sank.

Then it belonged to Davy Jones and

his locker of maritime wonders.

She looked down at the motionless

body on the deck. He probably would have survived a direct hit from a semi rig

better than his battle with Hyde. She grimly pictured in her mind that

horrendous beast cutting a swath through the German lines during the war. It's

a wonder that particular conflict lasted as long as did. I guess it depended on

how many planes the RAF had opted to lose. They should have dropped him on

Berlin.

All day she kept her vigil,

splitting her attention between the horizon and the deck. She had no delusions

about Hyde. He had survived a lot; had murdered a lot and if he was still alive

out there, she innately knew he would find his way to this ship. She pitied any

country that was close enough for him to make to their shores for they would be

struck with a tragedy of epic proportions.

But then, maybe the depths had taken

him. She laughed grimly. The world couldn't be that lucky. There was also a

chance that Hyde had lost cohesion, reverting back to his human host. Again it

was doubtful. Stevenson had said that anything that had the potential of

killing him would bring out the bad side. Drowning seemed to be right up there

in the realm of ways of dying. That in itself would force Hyde to remain.

Her watch continued over the course

of the next several days. Cans were opened and food, though not appealing cold,

was eaten. By day three Edward was looking...more complete, save his missing left

arm. She had moved him to the interior the day before, hoping the drier

conditions would help him along. She hardly knew what to say to him about his

missing appendage. She was just glad he was alive.

He was a little more pragmatic

about the situation. He was sitting up in the bed, looking out the porthole.

Reaching up, he gingerly felt his shoulder. "Well Mags, looks like we'll need

to find a thrift shop when we get to land."

"What? Why?"

"You know; a second hand store."

"I can't believe you! You're making

a joke about something like this?"

"What do you want me to do? I only

hope that everyone else is ok. Hyde and I really trashed the plane before we

left."

"I haven't forgotten everyone else.

But I can't exactly call and find out now can I?"

                "Chill

out Mags. We're alive, and that counts for something. But in retrospect, I

think the next time someone wants to come with us, the answer is going to be

no. Hey, did you see if the ship's radio worked?"

                "There's

no power, remember? I've been using my new nails to open the cans."

                "Yes,

your new form is quite...interesting. Still haven't been able to get the wings to

retract?"

                "Obviously

not," she said petulantly, "otherwise I'd have ditched them a while ago. They're

a pain to deal with down here in the hold."

                "True.

But you look amazing with them. Especially right now."

                She had

reverted as much as she could, turning most of herself into her human form. Her

feet and legs were stuck in something much more akin to...to...something avian. Her

wings were the color of her skin, though originally they had her fur on them.

She was as variable in this new form as she was in her others. But right now

she was painfully beautiful. Her face, though looking worn from worry, had a

glow and a life about it that seemed magnified her in the dim light of the

room.

                "If I

felt more up to it, I'd drag you down on the bed and make love to you. But I'm

not very handy at the moment..."

                "Shut

up before I throw you overboard."

                He put

on his best hurt face. "It's not like I'm trying to strong arm you or

anything..."

                She

jumped on top of him and kissed him passionately.

                "What

was that for?" he said with a touch of amusement in his voice when she released

his lips.

                "There is

more than one way of getting you to be quiet."

                He

smiled. "It's going to be alright, I promise."

                "And

how do you know?" But she caught herself. "What do you see?"

                "A life

together. I have learned not to look too hard for answers, because I think I'm

just too stupid to understand it anyway."

                "Is

that so? At some point in time we are going to run out of food you know. And

this stupid hunk of steel has been floating around for who knows how long. I

doubt anyone is going to find us on it."

                "Just

because I can't go anywhere doesn't mean you can't. You have wings now, which means

you're about as tied down to this ship as the breeze is. I'd suggest you quit

worrying so much about me and learn how to use those things. Have you ever seen

an eagle in action?"

                "Sure,

but one bird is like another don't you think?"

                "Yep,

except when they're not."

                "I'm

hardly going to hover in place like a hummingbird you know!"

                "I

agree. But keep eagles in mind. They do soaring very well. Learn how to expend

the least amount of energy and you can go far on the winds."

                "But I

don't want to go far!"

                "You

may have to. This ship could be anywhere in the North Sea. I'm sure there's

traffic in the region, but like you said, this wreck has been drifting for a

while. That alone makes me think that it's either very much lost or avoided.

You may have to go miles before you can figure out where we're at."

                "If you

say so. The sun is out today. Do you think I should try it?"

                "I do.

And the sooner we get off this floating heap the better."

                "I

doubt it's going to be that easy. What are we going to do about you?"

                "We'll

worry about that when the time comes."

                She

climbed up into the open air, stretching her wings before pumping them and

feeling her feet leave the deck. With a cry she launched herself skyward. The

tissue between her ribs and the wings had filled in and healed over with skin,

compounding her concern that the wings were ever going to retract back to a

position where they couldn't be seen. But for now, she was content to fly.

                She soon

learned to take the thermals; the heat rising from the surface of the ocean.

Edward had been right about that, and the more she thought it over, the more

she remembered watching vultures circle for hours with a single flap of their

wings. She locked her wings out to their fullest. With her legs held straight

behind her she proved to have a very aerodynamic form.

                It

turns out the ship was very far from land, so far in fact that after an hour of

soaring in ever widening circles, she saw nothing that looked remotely like

land. But she did see a disturbance in the surface of the water.  Dropping down to investigate showed the dark

patch to be a school of fish.

                She

wished she had some way of catching one, for some fresh food would be a nice

change of pace. But without a net or a hook and line, she was sunk. Then Edward's

words struck her.

Like an eagle.

                She

swung around, lined up with the school and dived. When she was just a few feet

off the surface, she pulled up and leveled off, pulling up again and slashing

her feet into the water. With a few strong blasts from her wings she pulled up

clutching a cod in each foot.

                The

trip back was short, not surprising considering she had refused to go far from

the ship. She dropped the fish on the deck and landed with the lightest of

touches. Picking up the fish she carried them down to Edward.

                He saw

them and smiled. "So you thought like an eagle after all!"

                "I did!

I don't like these feet but they have their uses."

                He

looked over the fish. "Something fresh sounds good, but how are you are sushi?"

                "Sushi?

Do I look like a chef?"

                "You

have to learn some time."

                "There

is nothing usable in the kitchen in the way of spices, except maybe salt.

Everything else has gone bad."

                "Beggars

can't be choosers. Get some salt if you like, but raw is what's on the menu."

                She

watched him eat one handed, thankful that if he was to lose a limb is was the

non dominant one. He never complained once. She knew he was thankful to be

alive after the terrible fight with Hyde. He was healed now as much as he was

going to be so it seemed. And he appeared resigned to it.

                He was

watching her in turn, suddenly leaning in and grasping the silver vial. "What

did you do with this earlier? I've been wearing your ring."

"I tossed it in a drawer. What

should we do with this do you suppose?"

"That's a good question."

                "I

thought about throwing it away, but I've fought that idea until now. Should I

toss it overboard?"

                "I say

keep it. I for one have no desire to be less than what I am, but obviously he

did. We'll hand it over to Leo when we make it to Rome. Maybe he'll find an

interest in it."

                "Do you

think we'll ever make it to Rome?"

                "Sure I

do. We just got delayed a little in the meantime."

                "Delayed

a little? That's an understatement."

                "We're

together. It's not the most glamorous of cruises, but we do have the ship to

ourselves."

                "In the

middle of the North Sea no less! Couldn't we have picked the Bahamas?"

                "Heat

and fur don't go together very well in my estimation. On the other hand, you in

a swimsuit might be appealing."

                "More

so than me being nude?" she said saucily, seeing as she was at that moment buck

naked.

                "There

is something to be said for clothing too. Somehow the art of concealing what

you have has been something women have leaned over the centuries."

                Maggie

stood, wrapping herself in her wings. "Like this?"

                He

reached out with his lone arm and pulled her in. "Precisely!"

                She

batted her eyes fetchingly and giggled as he dragged her onto the bed.