A E Johnson

Home > Other > A E Johnson > Page 4
A E Johnson Page 4

by alice johnson


  back grew, she remained small. Her long locks of wavy

  blond hair and pale pink skin spelt perfection, small

  features made for a pretty, yet powerful face. Her

  flawless eyes, however, were odd, many had not

  noticed, and those who did, never spoke of the

  changing girl. The colour in her eyes changed daily,

  different colours of amber, lilac, azure, emerald, and

  hazel was enchanting to those who had noticed. At

  such a young age a beauty already shone from her

  eyes.

  Spring was one of her favourite times of the year.

  She had left her bunkhouse that morning, to collect

  some small pebbles on the road, pebbles she found

  interesting. The camp was dull to most, but to her it

  was bright, it was home. Her eye was caught by a flitter

  of a bird on the path. She stood silent on the path and

  watched. The morning had brought a small rain,

  puddles on the road had filled just enough for some of

  the sparrows to bathe in.

  “Good morning,” she greeted. Of course, they did

  not reply, “it is a wonderful morning,” she seemed to

  agree with unspoken words.

  Her odd behaviour was noticed by some of the

  older children. As the four-year-old child stood talking

  to birds, they could not help themselves in their

  cruelty. Stood in her tattered clothes, she was startled

  to see a small pebble land beside her. “That’s odd,”

  she said to herself, “I didn’t call you.” Baffled, she

  leant down and plucked the stone from the ground.

  As she stood a larger stone hit her on the chest. “Ow!

  That hurt!” she complained. She looked around the

  camp, a group of several older boys stared towards

  her. Unlike the girl they wore small plimsole shoes,

  their tattered trousers were covered with flour from

  the mills they had returned from that morning.

  She saw one of the older of the boys throw a large

  stone at her. It landed at her feet. She did not even

  flinch as another, much larger stone hurled through

  the air towards her, the girl lifted her hand and caught

  the stone, it forced her arm back slightly, it easily

  could have cracked her head.

  “Fucking freak!” shrieked the boy who had thrown

  it.

  He began a fast pace towards her. “I suggest you

  stop,” she said in her delicate voice. Her words were

  slightly muddled. “Or carry on, if you must,” her invite

  forced him to walk quicker, a defiant smile appeared

  on her face.

  The boy scowled towards her as he called, “And

  what are you gonna do?” His eyes were dark, bullying

  was not on his mind, something much darker was, the

  camps were a place of hardness, and he wanted to

  show her how hard it could be. “I’ll break your neck,

  freak!” he threatened as he came close. He was

  followed by three other boys, who had witnessed the

  stone being caught. They tended to stay away from the

  strange girl.

  The girl looked towards him from under her

  brows, her chaotic white hair blew in the wind. A

  storm seemed to brew in her deep green eyes. She was

  not angry, but the girl felt something, deep down

  inside, she knew she was capable of a power they had

  never seen before. Lifting her hand towards him as he

  thundered towards her, she watched as his left arm

  snapped in two. The bottom of his arm, between his

  elbow and wrist was completely in half.

  The boy cried out in pain, “Oh fuck!”

  She was at first shocked to see she had such power,

  but as she saw him screaming her smile grew. She was

  not finished with him; she took a step forward, “That,

  is what I’m gonna do,” she mocked.

  “I will fucking brain you!” he shouted to her, spit

  fell from his mouth, it forced her to smile more, his

  arm seemed to flail as he walked faster, even with a

  look of pain plastered on his face.

  “Not without legs,” she said with a low tone.

  He fell to the floor and looked towards the girl; a

  look of terror appeared in his eyes streaming with

  tears, he screamed in agony as he looked to his legs,

  both showed bone through skin, blood covered the

  wounds.

  The others watched on as the little girl turned and

  proceeded to skip back towards her bunk house. The

  boy remained on the damp ground, screaming in

  agony.

  The staff listened to the boy’s story, but they failed

  to believe him, until a series of strange events started

  to occur in the camp, always surrounding the strange,

  Unknown Girl.

  Taking a break from the chaos of the camp,

  Nareena stepped out onto the cobbled path. The

  camps were a form of income for people like

  Nareena, she cared for the children to some extent.

  Her age had seen many children move through the

  camps. Usually, she would be alongside the work-

  mills, which rolled out linens, woodwork, and flour.

  The sound of beating anvils rang in the air as the older

  children began their days work of making chainmail,

  swords, and other delights which would soon adorn

  the battlefields.

  The dust of a dry autumn still hung in the air, the

  smell of pine from the woodland seemed

  overwhelming. Nareena was a heavy-set woman, she

  did not take nonsense from the children she was there

  to care for. As she watched the children from

  bunkhouse twelve walk down the cobbled path

  towards the work-mills, she heard a strange rumbling

  from the bunkhouse at the side of her. Bunkhouse

  thirteen seemed to be erupting.

  Suddenly she heard a loud cracking from the old

  wooden door to her side, a strange trickle of water

  appeared. She leant down and looked towards it,

  instantly she was swept from her feet by a cascade of

  flooding water, knocked to the ground she flowed out

  with a boy beside her, Robb tumbled along the

  cobbled ground as the strange girl stepped into the

  doorway.

  The girl shouted to him, “That, is what happens!”

  “Agh!” screamed Nareena, she flew to her feet and

  darted towards the girl. Taking her by her tattered

  clothes, she marched the small girl to the warden’s

  hut.

  Throwing the door open, Nareena threw the girl

  inside, the grey wooden floorboards thudded as the

  girl fell to the floor, dust flew from the boards, the

  bookcases surrounding wobbled as the tiny child was

  thrown in.

  Sat at his desk, surrounded by chaotic masses of

  papers, Madoc sifted through his work. Lifting his

  large brown eyes towards the chaos that had entered

  his room, he removed his small, rimmed glasses. His

  aging eyes showed the lifetime of terror he had seen,

  his grey brows hurled over his eyes connoting power

  and presence. He peered towards the girl with raised

  brows.

  Nareena stood, out of breath, by her side. “Can I


  help?” he mockingly asked.

  “I bloody hope so,” scowled Nareena, “this, little,

  shit,” she said with her mouth curling unable to hold

  her anger. “Again, the bunks are in chaos because of

  her.”

  Madoc stood. He did not approve of what

  Nareena was saying, given the child’s age. “She’s a

  child, Nareena.” He came to the front of his old

  wooden desk, towering over the young girl as he did.

  His thick woollen robes of grey hung from him. She

  looked up towards him seemingly frightened.

  In a calm voice he asked, “What has she done?”

  Nareena pulled on the young girls tattered clothes,

  tugging her up to stand. “What hasn’t she done?” she

  shrieked. “She is chaos!” she shouted, “I can’t cope

  with it, the creature is evil, in the purest terms.”

  Madoc took a dislike to her speaking in such a way

  about a child. “No child is evil,” he grumbled. Slowly

  he leant down towards the young girl. His brows

  raised. “Perhaps you could explain this to me?”

  He seemed kind, the girl’s eyes flickered, she

  seemed to be reading him, gauging whether he could

  be trusted.

  “The boy,” she slowly began, “he was being

  punished,” she nodded.

  Madoc seemed intrigued, “Punished for what?”

  The girl’s eyes widened as she looked from the

  corner of her eyes to Nareena. She whispered, “For

  touching me,” Madoc felt his heart sink, “the boy who

  I broke, he was throwing rocks at me, so I broke him,”

  she explained, “that’s when I knew, I knew I could do

  these things.” Her excitement confused Madoc and

  Nareena, they both paid closer attention to the girl.

  Like a broken bucket the girl began to spill everything.

  “The boy in the woods, he kept kicking me, so I

  broke his ankle, that stopped him. Then there was the

  girl who kept taking my food, I made her fat,” she gave

  a hearty giggle. She could see a slight laugh from

  Madoc. “But the boy in thirteen, he touched me,” her

  voice softened, her excitement died; “in a place I don’t

  want to be touched.” Her face became a look of

  innocent sadness.

  Madoc could feel his blood boil, but he did not

  want her to see his rage. “What do you mean?”

  “It wasn’t the first time,” she said with a soft,

  broken voice. “The first time he tried, a big girl came

  into the room, he stopped, but this time no one was

  there, so I had to get him out, I didn’t want him

  touching me there,” her miserable eyes flickered with

  a loss of innocence, “it hurts.”

  Madoc tried, with all his might to hold his temper.

  “I need to know, where did he touch you,” he

  crouched towards her, softly, he asked, “point to

  where it was?”

  The girl looked into his eyes, she knew he could

  be trusted, she did not know how she knew, but she

  did. She pointed to her crotch. Madoc stood, holding

  a hand to his mouth he looked to Nareena with wide

  eyes. Rage began to show in his eyes, “You knew of

  this?”

  “Robb…” she slowly tried to find her words,

  looking for any excuse, “he’s been warned before,

  many times,” she tried to explain, “he can be

  overbearing, he’s a difficult one.”

  “Take him to the workhouse,” grumbled Madoc,

  “twenty lashings.”

  Shaking her head Nareena stepped forward, she

  placed a hand on his shoulder, begging him, but he

  turned his shoulder away from her. “You knew about

  this!” he shouted to her, “take the little bastard or I

  will!”

  Trembling, Nareena ran from the warden’s hut.

  She searched for Robb. Nareena heard a laugh from

  inside bunkhouse nine, it was Robb’s voice. She made

  her way to the bunkhouse, looking through a window,

  she saw him, sat at the edge of his bed. Nareena took a

  deep breath, she calmed herself before making her

  way into the bunkhouse. Slowly she opened the door.

  Her voice was calm. “Robb, with me.”

  Robb looked up; he was still dripping from the

  water. “It was so strange,” said Robb as he walked

  towards Nareena, his eyes were wide and filled with

  excitement, “I don’t know where she got the water

  from, she just held up her hands, and that was it, I was

  flooded.” He saw the plain look on Nareena’s face,

  she did not reply, she did not say a single word. “What

  is it?” he asked as he came closer.

  Nareena stood silent propping the door open with

  her arm. “With me, Robb.” Robb walked towards her.

  She stepped into the bunk house, taking a rope which

  was hanging on the wall at the side. His eyes began to

  widen, his smile withered, and died. “Don’t make this

  any harder,” she softly said, “I have my orders, now

  take yours.”

  “I didn’t do anything!” Tears instantly streamed

  down his face. At fourteen years old, he had been

  hardened by the camps, but he knew that the rope

  meant a lashing, the last lashing was over three years

  ago. “Please!” he begged with a broken voice.

  “Robb, just come with me,” she softly said, she

  knew there was a chance he could run, and if he did, it

  would be worse than twenty lashings. She took the

  rope and tied his arms behind his back, Robb

  struggled, but her weight overpowered the scrawny

  boy.

  Robb broke, as the knot tightened, he began to

  struggle hard. His eyes became wild, his muddy brown

  hair became filled with fearful sweat, flailing his tied

  arms he screamed, “No!” his voice had broken to a

  terrified squeal. Nareena said nothing as she dragged

  him from the bunkhouse. Forcing him across the

  cobbled streets towards the workhouses.

  Robb continued to scream, “No! No! I didn’t do

  anything!” His squealing voice carried through the

  camp, children began to peer through the windows of

  the mills and bunkhouses, anvils stopped working as

  they dropped tools and looked towards the noise.

  Nareena struggled to drag him across the cobbles,

  his trousers were bloodied by the stones as they grazed

  his legs and knees.

  “I have my orders, Robb,” his squeals disturbed

  her, “you’ll be getting twenty, you’ll be lucky to live so

  I suggest you make it quick.”

  Robb was wet with sweat as she dragged him into

  the work yard, a post was set up, a cross bar at the top

  showed years of disuse, it was grey and weathered

  wood. A large man, charged with such duties ran

  towards Nareena who still struggled with Robb, he

  heard the wailing and screaming as he ran into the

  yard.

  “He’s to have twenty,” she ordered. She passed the

  rope to him. He tied Robb around the post, keeping

  the skin on his back tight, he left his shirt closed,

  knowing that the first few lashings woul
d rip his

  clothes.

  Slowly, he made his way towards his hut at the side

  of the workhouse. He took a long rope, nine ropes

  hung from a central point of the handle of the rope.

  Six ropes were bound with wire, three ropes had tiny

  hooks weaved into them, designed to rip through cloth

  and skin.

  His duty was clear, he knew Madoc was a fair man,

  and would give no such order, unless it was deserved.

  Robb continued to beg; his calls of screaming

  anguish was heard throughout the camp as the lashings

  began. Some of the children began to count.

  One…two…three, they whispered. With each lashing

  came a scream of pain, birds were sent from the trees,

  as they reached ten, the screaming stopped, it became

  a dull moan.

  Nareena watched on, she did not expect to be

  taking Robb back to his bunkhouse. His scars would

  soon heal, but his mind would forever be broken, if he

  were lucky enough to survive twenty lashings.

  Alone in the hut, the girl stood silent. Madoc

  slowly made his way back towards his chair. He was

  still horrified.

  “Child,” he looked to the girl. “Please sit,” he

  offered. Slowly the girl walked to the chair at his desk,

  awkwardly she climbed up and took a seat. “What is

  your name?”

  “I don’t have one,” she innocently replied, “I’ve

  not been given one yet.”

  Madoc sat back, he pointed his fingers and held

  them to his lips. ‘How could the world have become

  this?’ he thought. “What name would you like?” he

  opened his hands palm up.

  Shaking her head, the girl looked towards him.

  “I’m not ready for my name yet.”

  Her innocence troubled him. “My dear, you can

  decide on whatever name you wish, all you need to do

  is choose.”

  The little girl sat up in her chair, she held a tiny

  power and presence. “One day, I will be known by

  many names, for now I am happy being called the

  Unknown Girl,” her smile was wide and proud, “one

  day, I will earn my name.”

  He admired the child, she looked too young to

  even speak, but her mind seemed older than that of a

  willow tree.

  Madoc shook his head. “Then, how old are you?”

  Shaking her head, the girl replied, “I think I’m

  nearly five, I was four at the last end, so when the trees

 

‹ Prev