It was just an ordinary morning until the corner hounds came for her.
Ever since she’d made her deal with Alt, all sorts of strange things had been happening to her. She liked to think that it was because of that, but in reality, she’d made some warlocks upset a few weeks ago, and the recent attacks had probably been their retaliation. It was mostly small stuff, and never at the school, but when she left, she had to keep her guard up.
She was out for a jog on one of the hiking trails at Oceania Park, in one of the more obscure nooks that she liked to visit. She hadn’t seen another person in, like, twenty minutes. Her hair was up in a bun, and she was lacking her trademark pointed hat, an oddity for her. She wore a pair of gray athletics shorts with a white jersey that said “The Wizards, #23.” She hoped MJ wouldn’t be insulted by her purchasing of the jersey for a stupid joke.
She didn’t like to leave the school unarmed, but she’d been a bit naive, assuming that nothing would happen somewhere so public. She had been wrong.
As she passed by a small pavilion, she stopped to catch her breath, leaning against a picnic table, her hands on her sides. There was a small pond near the pavilion, remarkably clear, and calm enough that you could see your reflection in it. Curious, she strode towards it, kneeling down to peer into the water. She was lucky she did, because her reflection gave her the only warning she would have gotten.
From a corner of one of the pavilion’s support beams, a creature emerged, seeming to squeeze right through it as easily as if it were walking through a doorway. It looked like… Well, let’s just say she understood the reason that Frank Long never described what they looked like. You could call it a “hound,” and that would kind of get the impression across. She didn’t really have time to ogle herself, because it was already running the instant it stepped through the corner.
She moved quickly, acting without thinking. It was hard to think when something that big and that scary looking was hoping to make you its dinner. She leapt towards the pond, twisting in the air, and held up a hand, shouting an incantation. A lance of flame burst forth from her hand, just as the beast’s teeth began to close around it.
Gods, this thing was fast.
If it wasn’t nice to look at before, it certainly hadn’t improved now. As she flew back into the water, the beast’s flesh(?) bubbled and burst, as she roasted it alive from within, all while it chewed on her wrist like she was a squeaky toy. She crashed into the water, covered in the pulpy, charred remains of the hound, its head still halfheartedly chewing on her hand.
She burst through the surface of the water, coughing and sputtering, and came to the shore quickly, shaking off the head of the beast and looking at her hand. It hadn’t been trying to rip her arm off, which was her only saving grace. Her wrist had been torn up pretty badly, and her little dip in the pond meant that it was probably gonna get infected now. Great.
”Thunderation!” She cried in frustration, setting to work on her hand, sitting cross-legged. She worked a healing spell, cursing with old timey words like “‘snails” and “fuck,” and the wound began to knit itself shut, but it was slow going, mostly because she didn’t want to waste one of her better spells.
Ever since she’d made her deal with Alt, all sorts of strange things had been happening to her. She liked to think that it was because of that, but in reality, she’d made some warlocks upset a few weeks ago, and the recent attacks had probably been their retaliation. It was mostly small stuff, and never at the school, but when she left, she had to keep her guard up.
She was out for a jog on one of the hiking trails at Oceania Park, in one of the more obscure nooks that she liked to visit. She hadn’t seen another person in, like, twenty minutes. Her hair was up in a bun, and she was lacking her trademark pointed hat, an oddity for her. She wore a pair of gray athletics shorts with a white jersey that said “The Wizards, #23.” She hoped MJ wouldn’t be insulted by her purchasing of the jersey for a stupid joke.
She didn’t like to leave the school unarmed, but she’d been a bit naive, assuming that nothing would happen somewhere so public. She had been wrong.
As she passed by a small pavilion, she stopped to catch her breath, leaning against a picnic table, her hands on her sides. There was a small pond near the pavilion, remarkably clear, and calm enough that you could see your reflection in it. Curious, she strode towards it, kneeling down to peer into the water. She was lucky she did, because her reflection gave her the only warning she would have gotten.
From a corner of one of the pavilion’s support beams, a creature emerged, seeming to squeeze right through it as easily as if it were walking through a doorway. It looked like… Well, let’s just say she understood the reason that Frank Long never described what they looked like. You could call it a “hound,” and that would kind of get the impression across. She didn’t really have time to ogle herself, because it was already running the instant it stepped through the corner.
She moved quickly, acting without thinking. It was hard to think when something that big and that scary looking was hoping to make you its dinner. She leapt towards the pond, twisting in the air, and held up a hand, shouting an incantation. A lance of flame burst forth from her hand, just as the beast’s teeth began to close around it.
Gods, this thing was fast.
If it wasn’t nice to look at before, it certainly hadn’t improved now. As she flew back into the water, the beast’s flesh(?) bubbled and burst, as she roasted it alive from within, all while it chewed on her wrist like she was a squeaky toy. She crashed into the water, covered in the pulpy, charred remains of the hound, its head still halfheartedly chewing on her hand.
She burst through the surface of the water, coughing and sputtering, and came to the shore quickly, shaking off the head of the beast and looking at her hand. It hadn’t been trying to rip her arm off, which was her only saving grace. Her wrist had been torn up pretty badly, and her little dip in the pond meant that it was probably gonna get infected now. Great.
”Thunderation!” She cried in frustration, setting to work on her hand, sitting cross-legged. She worked a healing spell, cursing with old timey words like “‘snails” and “fuck,” and the wound began to knit itself shut, but it was slow going, mostly because she didn’t want to waste one of her better spells.