Animal Urge

Bent and growling

Howling moans

And heavy breath

Our animals unleashed

We are fang and claw

Yet here now

We are intimate

Powerful

Dangerous

Yet loving

And careful

Dichotomy in passion

How wild you drive me

What we do to one another

Never enough to sate that hunger

Even as we slow

Panting heavy

We kiss

Ignite

Once again

To once more

Unleash

Our primal urge

A Cold Night

The loam gave to his grasping hands as something dragged him away.

No

This is not right

He’s sliding. The ground now a hill. Half dead saplings snap and splinter as he tumbles past, body a blur as he rolls over end.

Then air.

Free.

Flying.

Next, a splash. Icy talons sink into every inch of flesh. They wish to tear him apart. Rend this fool’s form. He gasps in a lungful of river before his head meets riverbed.

He swims in inky nothing. But soon is dragged, gagging, coughing, heaving, retching from the depths.

A man, dressed in buck skin and hay, leans over him. “Sir, y’allright?”

His head is still swimming, tumbling, flying. He turns over, onto hands and knees as he holds out a hand to stop this stranger. “Leave me…”

“Sir, yer bleedin’…” The stranger reached out with a gentle hand.

He pulled a blade from a latched case on his hip, swiping at the stranger vaguely. “Get the fuck away!” He barked, stumbling as he backed away.

The stranger held up his hands, stepped back, and then ran, disappearing between so many perfectly disorganized trees.

“Filthy…” He grunted as he found purchase on a low branch. “Backwards…” He hissed as he stepped up the embankment, snow kissing his ankles. “Heathens…”

An owl watched the man, head bleeding, leaving a crimson trail, blood current, from where he had been dragged from the river.

Something else watched too. Sinew and fang. Teeth, sharp and poised. Eyes shocking red and unblinking.

Angel of death. Spirit of vengeance. Serpent of Curses. Cormac.

This man reeked of sins and blood. All his folly had called forth this beast. As it struck out, venom singing violent violet through his veins, he knew what he had done. How it had been called, and why he would die that night.

Gods of the Forest

The woods give to me

Bow branches low

Eager to cradle

I am thrill and hush

What wild has allways meant

Fang and fur

And fiery eyes

Eager rushing hushing run

Seeking the next rend

Brilliant crimson flow

Faintest splash nearby

Leap from the riverbed

I am joined by Her

Head low and stealth

Quiet as death

She moves to lead

And I follow soundlessly

Together we will satiate

That which allways hungers