Far Horizons: Tales of Sci-Fi, Fantasy and Horror. Issue #11 February 2015 | Page 34

a sleek and powerful black wolf. Its long fangs dripped with a mixture of poison and saliva. The girl opened her mouth to scream but no sound was forthcoming. Her death was mercifully quick as the wolf tore out her throat. As the wolf ripped apart her body and gorged itself, it didn’t notice the forgotten and still-uncovered glass ball on the table, which momentarily flashed with a chilling blue light. More History Lessons After lunch was cleared away, Manfred stood and cleared his throat. The room came slowly to silence. Twelve faces stared at him expectantly from points around the huge circular table. Velacourt remained, though his handmaidens had been asked to leave. Rheanna now sat alone, her guards too having left the chamber. Manfred looked at them one by one over the metal rims of his spectacles, meeting their gaze, grabbing their attention, locking them to his will. Simon was the last to be locked in. He was drawn into the wizard’s gaze and found himself lost in the pale green pools of his eyes, swimming in a velvety softness. A voice spoke quietly in his mind, “Pay attention, heed what I say, do not interrupt or question until I have finished.” Simon trusted the wizard implicitly. He knew he had no cause to fear him and so he allowed the voice to work its magic. If only my university lecturers could learn this technique, he thought as the wizard broke contact. Simon thought he saw a momentary smile flash onto Manfred’s face before it stiffened into a stern visage. Manfred stood before them. He was clothed all in white, his long white hair and beard adding to the purity he projected. He held his staff in his right hand and an ancient scroll in his left. Every person present that day was indelibly affected by him. They all spoke in awe of the vision in white, glowing with power, strong and ancient. They remembered the multi-hued staff glowing with the same power and the strength of his voice. They never forgot the words that he spoke; they were burned into their minds. Yet, when he sat down afterwards and he released them from his spell, PAGE 34 they saw a small, \