Bloodrush (The Scarlet Star Trilogy Book 1)

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Book: Bloodrush (The Scarlet Star Trilogy Book 1) by Ben Galley Read Free Book Online
Authors: Ben Galley
Tags: Fiction
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scarred with the pockmarks of hooves and wheel-ruts. Its tentacles were wandering, misshapen buildings and ambling paths. Its skin was made of wooden slats, jagged and tortured like every true monster’s skin, and like every true monster, it was being harried and attacked.
    The freshly beaten railroad from the east pierced the monster’s side like a silver spear and ran it clean through. Roads snaked in from the north and south, looking for all the world like ropes lassoing the creature’s wooden limbs. As the light faded and the shadows grew long, Merion could almost imagine the town thrashing and flailing as sunset made the sky ripple. With every twist of the track they came closer. The locomotive aimed its nose right for the heart of the town and chugged towards it. The men in his carriage had grown silent. Merion just pressed his face harder against the glass.
    The black skeleton of a church lay on Fell Falls’ eastern outskirts, as though it had somehow escaped the tentacled clutches of the sprawling monster yet had paid the price with fire and flame. In the scorched soil of its graveyard, stood a congregation of sun-bleached crosses, creaking in the desert breeze. Some were dressed in dusty hats with holes, others adorned with pickaxes and tools, still others with garlands of wild flowers, either fresh or dried and crumbling. Some crosses bore no gifts at all. Merion tried to count them as they rumbled past.
    On the locomotive’s other side, to what Merion assumed was the north, a great barn stood alone in the desert. Flags flapped from several poles on its roof, each bearing colours and shapes, but at that distance Merion couldn’t make out their specifics. To his squinting eyes, it almost looked like a coat of arms of some sort.
    No matter where Merion looked, how far he craned his neck, or how much he squinted, he could not spot a single drop of water. Unless they were to be found in the surrounding low hills, it seemed that Fell Falls actually had no falls at all; the name was a lame joke at the town’s expense.
    As the locomotive pulled into the station (if a jumble of wooden decking, a glorified shed, and a small outhouse can be considered a station), the sun was just about to set. The vast sky had turned a deep, furnace-orange, and it made Fell Falls glow.
    There was barely a brick building in sight. The whole of the town seemed to be constructed of a grim grey wood. Thankfully, its citizens had gone to some effort with their paintbrushes, and there were plenty of colours on the insides of the monster. There were plenty of citizens too. The dusty streets were abuzz with men and women. Workers, guards, farmers, shop girls, stableboys, the lot. Merion watched them as they wandered to and fro, some drinking, others laughing. Some even sang. He wondered how there could be so much merriment in a place as dangerous as this. Why weren’t these people in their homes, behind locked doors ? He wondered.
    What Merion did not know, and would soon find out, is that it took a special type of person to exist out here, on the edge of the world: the sort of person that knows, as we all do, that copious amounts of alcohol and laughter are brilliant methods of keeping the heavy weight of mortality and an occasional disembowelling off your back.
    Once the train had come lurching to a halt, the men filed off one by one, rubbing their hands at the thought of whiskey and women. So eager were they, in fact, that Merion was soon left alone. He had a grim look on his face.
    Rhin’s head poked out from beneath the flap of the rucksack. ‘Are you ready?’ he asked slowly, as if it were a dangerous question to be asking.
    ‘I am. But trust me, Rhin, we won’t be here long,’ growled the boy.
    Rhin narrowed his eyes. ‘What are you on about?’
    Merion shook his head. ‘I’ll tell you later.’
    ‘Right you are, but don’t do anything stupid in the meantime, like running into the desert. I don’t feel too good about

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