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Dead Horse Running

1844 A.D.- The American West

By Lightning BoltPublished 2 years ago Updated 2 years ago 24 min read
25

The great white stallion stood atop a grassy hill, watching humans on horseback as they chased the buffalo herd.

Dust kicked up by the stampede hung heavy in the muggy autumn air. The moos and moans and hoof-beats of the fleeing bison created an agonized thunder that rolled across the steppe. Cutting through that cacophony of terror was an infuriating sound: the happy whooping of bloodthirsty men.

From his vantage point, a considerable distance from the action, the stallion’s sharp eyes could see nearly two-dozen riders, adorned in the skins of animals. The men controlled their steeds by the clutch of their legs, freeing up their two hateful hands to wield their deadly weapons. Arrows flew, wounding a shaggy straggler. When the buffalo stumbled and fell, the great white stallion whinnied and reared. He could see feathers sticking out of the men’s hair, feathers dangling from leather bridles; the humans flocked like buzzards to the injured cow.

The ivory steed snorted and stomped the hard earth. The hunters agitated him! He hated all humans equally, male and female, big and small. On numerous occasions, men on horseback had tried to catch him. But the white stallion was faster than any of their broken-spirit steeds. No human hand had ever touched him.

No human hand ever would!

Turning away from the bloody sight of the dying buffalo, the pale horse loped down the opposite side of the hill. Running across the short-grass steppe, his great heart rumbled with rage. Many minutes later, the stallion was still galloping at full speed as he approached the human encampment. Froth surged from his gasping mouth. His white body glistened with a sheen of sweat.

Over three-dozen teepees had been erected on the prairie. Several cook-fires sent ribbons of smoke into the gray sky. The stallion heard the chatter of the women and old people, the laughter of children. He saw little knots of gathered humans, including three naked boys taunting a large dog with a bison bone.

Not long after the pale horse saw the humans, the humans saw him.

He lowered his head and ran even faster, nostrils flaring. He caught the scent of their smoke and was nauseated by the stench of cooked meat.

The infuriated stallion careened through the encampment. People dove out of his way. Twice he came close to running someone down. The first time, he nearly flattened a mother and her child. The second time, he nearly trampled an infant girl. At the last second, an elderly man snatched the tiny damsel out of his path.

Suddenly, the stallion was past the final teepee, into open country again. He knew from the barking that he was being followed. Looking back, he saw his pursuers were two young boys riding ponies, and three panting dogs.

The great white stallion slowed down, allowing the youngsters and their pets to catch up. Then he unleashed his true speed and ended the chase, leaving his pursuers behind. After the boys gave up, the pale horse expended the last of his anger in a final, energetic burst.

Tired, panting, he slowed to a trot and stopped.

After a few moments of rest, the stallion walked westward, toward the approaching sunset, which also happened to be the direction of the nearest water source that had not been tainted by the loathsome hunters.

⚡ ______ ⚡

Horses have a ‘stay’ mechanism in their legs, which allows them to doze while standing up.

Most horses only sleep about two hours each day, usually broken up into fifteen minute naps. Once every few days, however, horses need to lie down to sleep. Only by lying on the ground can they achieve the deep sleep where dreams occur.

Horses are social animals and generally form attachments to others of their kind, but the great white stallion was different. He was a loner. He’d had mates in the past, including a gorgeous palomino mare; he’d sired numerous foals; but he only returned to his herd for a short time about once a week, when he was feeling sleep deprived, or randy.

At a place where the short-grass steppe gradually grew into a long-grass prairie, the pale horse arrived at a stream. Cottonwood, hawthorn, and burr oak trees grew along the banks. As he drank from the babbling waters, the stallion watched nearby grazing deer.

On some distant mesa, coyotes courted the moon with canine love songs.

The wind was starting to gust. The humidity was on the rise. A storm was coming.

Once his thirst was slaked, the great white stallion went in search of the herd. Three hours later, he found the other wild horses. Sixty-one individuals— eight or so stallions, thirty mares, and numerous colts, fillies, and foals— had gathered together near a rushing river, beside a steep, tree-lined hill. The foals and yearlings were grouped at the center of the herd, protected by the adults.

As the pale horse trotted up to the herd, other steeds snorted and shook their heads at his arrival. Everywhere he looked, the white stallion saw rapidly swishing tails.

The night-songs of owls and insects soothed him. Somewhere along the river a sextet of bullfrogs added their thrumming to the chorus. The great white stallion was nearly asleep already.

Two mares approached him. One was a black-spotted gray Appaloosa, a former mate of his. The other was a Mustang, with a golden tan coat. He allowed them to brush up against him and sniff him, before he shrugged them off and sauntered away.

Near the blithering river, not far from a group of yearlings and their mothers, he bent four knees and laid down. He was enchanted by the soothing sound of the lapping water. Somewhere in the distance, a pair of belligerent badgers was having a heated argument.

The great white stallion fell asleep. A short time later, ✨he dreamed.........

⚡ ______ ⚡

He walked (again) onto the battlefield.

The trampled long-grasses were glistening with freshly spilled blood. Dozens of bodies stained with war paint lay in various awkward positions, as still as rocks. Seeing slaughtered horses amongst the mangled humans filled the horse’s heart with both fear and rage.

This dream was a recollection, an actual event that happened when the stallion was still young. Two tribes of humans had battled late into the day. Skirmishes were still raging elsewhere and the warriors hadn’t yet had time to collect their dead.

The strong white colt was shocked by the carnage.

Before him was the corpse of a dark-haired teenage boy, splattered with gore, still clutching his bow. Part of the human’s head was caved in; he lay flopped on his side in a puddle of blood. The white colt bent down and lapped at the teen warrior’s wet face, drinking the seeping cruor of this barbaric enemy.

Wolves wailed, not far distant.

As he raised his head, the strong white colt suddenly saw a reflection in the pool of blood— the fire-eyed face of an unnatural man. He jumped, startled, his mane bristling.

That's when an entirely new nightmare diverged off the old memory. Words were thrust unwanted into the horse’s mind...

You are a most uncommon steed! You have a brave and angry spirit. And you already hate the redskins. You have even tasted their blood! For these reasons, I choose you to aid me in my crusade!

Wolves yowled in celebration.

Something Wicked— the tainted man— rose up out of the blood puddle, made of the blood, and he seized the terrified white colt in a bloody embrace.

The howling of the wolves…

The howling was real.

Awakening from his nightmare to panic and confusion, the great white stallion leapt to his feet. All around him, other horses were on the move. Animals jostled and pushed each other as they tried to flee. The baying of wolves seemed to come from everywhere at once. His mane prickled as he sensed he was being watched. Courageously, the steed turned to face the supernatural.

Two hundred yards away, the vampire stood poised atop a flattop hill, flanked by a pack of shadowy wolves. The great stallion’s heart jittered with fear. And he hated being afraid.

The man-monster raised an arm, ordering the pack to, "Attack!"

Around him, the terror of the herd increased. The great white stallion found himself in a bottleneck, horses pushing on him from all directions. Many colts and fillies bounded into the shallow river, forging across the swift waters with splashing speed. Mothers and their foals ran east or west, along the banks.

Finally, the frustrated stallion was able to propel himself free, moving against the equine tides. Fear giving way to fury, he galloped straight toward the advancing wolf pack.

The hill was steep and rocky, but there was a well-worn trail up the side of it, made by horses and bison. The wolves used the path to make their descent. The stallion ran up the same trail, jumping over the first wolves he encountered. When he landed, one hoof clipped a predator’s hindquarters, causing it to squeal in pain. Another hoof landed on a second wolf’s shoulder, smashing the beast to the ground. As he trampled the lupus, he never lost his footing, making another great leap.

Wolves rained off the hill, tumbling like a gray avalanche with tails.

The ivory steed left behind a reeling pack as he raced the last forty yards to crest the ridge. He no longer saw the monster! His horseflesh prickled and twitched, his tail swishing wildly. Alone on the flattop hill, he gazed down at the panicked herd.

Instead of pursuing the white stallion, the wolves not injured in his charge were dogging the other horses, causing more panic. He saw two Mustangs kicking at a circle of snarling wolves that were threatening a foal.

Because of the commotion below, it didn’t immediately occur to the stallion how unnaturally quiet this hilltop was. Just before he saw the miracle, he realized there were no crickets chirping— no sounds of any kind.

The vampire appeared out of nothingness. An ill wind blew past the horse; he could feel the malevolence in it; and it seemed to somehow gather moonlight into a shadow. The man-creature popped into existence, as solid as a rock.

The pale horse bounded down the far side of the hill, weaving in and out of trees, until he reached the open plains. Totally unnerved by the vampire’s sudden appearance, he couldn’t even summon up his hatred of being afraid. Beneath unfriendly stars, his adrenalin flowed as he ran for his life.

The stallion heard nothing— no sounds of pursuit— but he still didn’t slow his flight for nearly an hour. Finally, exhausted, certain he’d outrun the Evil, he slowed to a stop and looked back.

The vampire stood directly beside his left flank, perfectly still, unnaturally silent, his pallid face lit up eerily by the moon. The tainted man's close proximity caused the startled stallion to jump.

With preternatural quickness and terrifying strength, the vampire grabbed the steed by his head. The putrid smell of rotting meat was atrocious! The stallion struggled, but it was like fighting against a deeply rooted tree.

The fiend hissed, "You belong to me now! Accept it!"

The horse screamed, his eyes rolling over white.

Arms wrapped around the stallion’s neck in a cold embrace, the vampire told him, "You will be my Pale Horse. And I will be Death." The animated undead slashed his own wrist with his drawn-out fangs, tearing open shallow flesh. Dark red blood oozed, smelling more like bile than copper. "Together, we will hunt down the savages!" Grinning lips wet with his own ichor, the vampire shoved his bleeding wrist into the horse’s mouth.

The stallion bit down hard, trying to rip off the vampire’s hand, but it was like chewing on petrified wood. Brackish blood gushed over his tongue, down his throat, tasting rancid. Feeling dizzy, the great white stallion's knees went weak.

The vampire released him. The horse ran away. Behind him, the villain laughed.

On his unsteady legs, the fastest gait that the stallion could manage was a trot. His heart felt wrong in his chest, like it was slowly fluttering. And his lungs were on fire.

He realized he was dying!

The vampire’s voice reverberated in his brain...

Do not fight it, boy! Death is only the transition!

Rage cleared the stallion’s mind, bringing new strength to his extremities. He was embittered that the vampire was inside his head! He was incensed that he now understood language!?! And he was infuriated by the idea that he shouldn’t fight this!

He would resist this Wickedness until his last breath!

The stallion ran across the prairie, but he didn’t get far before the vampire’s poison stilled his great heart.

He died on the run, falling, rolling, tumbling through the grasses for many yards before finally coming to rest.

⚡☠___________☠⚡

Awakening late in the afternoon, on the third day after his death, the stallion immediately knew everything had changed.

Outside the cave, a thunderstorm was raging.

Without opening his eyes, the great white stallion discerned where he was. He could smell the wet limestone, the mold and bat guano, as well as the wood and soil that didn’t belong here. His sense of smell was infinitely more powerful than it had been before. His augmented hearing was now keen enough to hear prairie dogs huddling in their burrows, even over the noise of the thunderstorm. The stallion knew his eyesight would also be extraordinary, enhanced beyond his imagining. He delayed that moment, keeping his lids closed, as he worked to sort out his thoughts.

He realized that he had thought— an ability to consider that he didn’t have before... before he was murdered! He understood that he had died.

And then he realized how terribly thirsty he was! 🩸

Opening his eyes, the stallion climbed to his feet.

Horses have sharp, 350-degree eyesight, as well as excellent night vision, but they possess limited color-vision. Before he died, the great white stallion had difficulty distinguishing certain shades of green, brown, and gray. Now, not only could he see every vibrant color of the spectrum, his vision extended into both the infrared and ultraviolet spectrums.

The vampire had transformed him!

He could smell the Nosferatu— his tormentor, his creator—deeper in the cave. Unmindful of his footing, the stallion went to confront the vampire, unaware he was effortlessly snapping off solid stalagmites with his angry strides. He quickly found the source of the wood and earth odors. Three pine coffins were grouped in a thin natural chamber, each filled with soil from the country on the other side of the Mississippi River.

Realizing then that he possessed a great deal of knowledge that he shouldn’t, the stallion’s anger was mollified by awe.

The vampire’s name was Wallace Andrew Wellington III. He was from a land called Georgia, in a country called the United States of America. His family was wealthy; they owned many slaves. Dark-skinned humans had sated Wellington’s bloodthirst for the last fifty years. Recently, however, the monster had grown tired of feeding on broken people who were born into servitude. Wellington craved the blood of free men. And yet he also had an aversion to killing white men (which made absolutely no sense whatsoever to the horse.)

For Wellington, the year was numbered 1844. For the horse, the idea that the seasons could be counted was still beyond his grasp.

The steed also now possessed the knowledge of what it was like to be Nosferatu— all the powers: boundless strength and endurance, increased agility and speed, the ability to shape-shift and hypnotize— and all the limitations: the aversions to garlic and holy symbols, the need to ‘sleep’ on native soil, the inability to cross moving water, the deadliness of sunlight, and, most especially: the 🩸 bloodlust. 🩸🩸

The stallion also understood that just as horses needed less sleep than humans, so, too, did he need less rest than his creator. It was at least two hours until dusk. Wellington couldn’t rise until then. The vampire was vulnerable.

All stallions have additional teeth behind their incisors, four canine fangs called tushes. The ghastly white stallion now bore his, forcing them to grow three times their normal length.

Striding over to one of the unoccupied coffins, he raised his front left hoof and slammed it downward, shattering the wooden lid. Once the side of the box was exposed, the pale horse bent down and bit it, sinking his new vampire fangs deep into the pine. He picked up the long crate of earth (which weighed almost three hundred pounds, but felt light as a mouthful of grass), and he carried it through the cavern to the irregularly-shaped entrance.

Stepping out of the cave, into the storm, he felt just slightly weaker. The sun was well hidden behind the black storm clouds, but its diffuse light was still capable of having an enervating effect on him. The ghostly stallion found himself positioned high up the side of a steep cliff, about thirty feet above the steppe.

Repeated thunderclaps rocked the prairie. Wind and water conspired to create a slanted deluge.

With all his considerable strength, the four-hoofed fury twisted his head, flinging the coffin down the side of the cliff. It impacted a boulder, cracking and splintering. Georgian dirt quickly became slooshing mud.

Defiant joy filled the horse’s heart.

He returned for the second box, bashing in the lid, picking it up in his mouth, and then chucking it out into the downpour.

The final remaining coffin was the one occupied by Wellington.

When the stallion used both front hooves to crack open the third lid, the vampire roared telepathically...

Cease this immediately or suffer my wrath!

The horse bit the box, picking it up.

Wellington’s eyes opened, blazing with infernal fire. And while his body remained rigor mortis stiff, both hands suddenly shot out, grabbing the steed by his head.

Stop!

Mentally, the stallion laughed. Just as he knew he would never be able to crush Wellington’s skull, so he also knew Wallace couldn’t smash his. No vampire could kill another through brute force alone. When the vampire squeezed, the bronco felt a sharp pressure... but virtually no pain.

While Wellington continued to hiss telepathic curses, the pale horse calmly walked the coffin to the lip of the cave.

His toss was perfect; this pine casket struck a large boulder below, blasting apart. In addition to wood and dirt, the body of Wallace Andrew Wellington III somersaulted down the cliff.

The great white stallion whinnied in triumph.

From his vantage point high above, he watched Wellington claw his way over the rain-soaked rocks, moving like an injured spider. The vampire pulled himself up the side of the cliff, into the muddy deluge.

The ghostly steed intended to let the man-monster get all the way up to the edge of this cavern, before kicking him back down.

But Wallace didn’t even try to reach him. The half-functioning fiend found a cranny below, pulled himself into it, and then pulled a huge rock on top of himself.

The stallion retreated inside the cave.

Both Nosferatu now waited for the sun to go down.

⚡_________ ⚡

The pale horse locked his legs and briefly (slept) died, but he was wide awake later, as dusk approached.

The rain had stopped, but heat lightning still crawled across the distant skies. It was another muggy night on the Great American Plains. Below him, he could feel the rising fury of the vampire. The moment the sun was fully beneath the horizon, he knew Wellington would attack. The great ghastly stallion was ready.

The last hidden sliver of the sun dropped away.

The stone atop of the vampire was flung high into the air. Wellington rose up, screeching like a giant rat.

The stallion lunged out of the cave— leaping down the cliff to deftly land thirty feet below.

He turned back, glaring into Wallace’s red cinder eyes. He stomped a hoof, daring the vampire to try and catch him.

In an oily instant, Wellington transformed into a huge black wolf.

The undead stallion galloped away. The undead (man) wolf gave chase.

There was never any doubt about who would win the race. Before, when Wellington chased him, the bronco was still living flesh. But he was a dead horse now, capable of running infinitely faster. His hooves created an awful friction, kicking up sparks when he hit rocks, creating steam that would be brush fires if not for the recent rains.

The two bloodsuckers hastened east, sprinting deeper into the night.

When it finally became apparent to Wellington that he would never catch the stallion, he indulged in more telepathic threats...

I will return for you, beast! You are linked to me now! And when I do catch you, there will be Hell to pay!

Not the slightest bit out of breath, the pale horse whinnied laughter.

After projecting a final burst of baneful fury directly into the stallion’s mind, the vampire vanished.

The great white steed slowed to a stop, his skin gleaming with so much blood-sweat, he appeared to be a great crimson stallion.

His thirst was so dire, it hurt. He knew water would no longer sate him.

He needed blood.

His tushes growing again, the terrible horse turned and headed for the encampment of the fearsome buffalo hunters.

🔥💀 ____________ 🩸🔥

The laments of women were shriller than the cries of cougars in heat.

All around the hell-horse, teepees were on fire. Hot smoke created by burning buffalo skins added a pleasant bitterness to the stench of human fear. Warriors yipped and hollered as they attacked him. Already he had been shot with more than a dozen arrows, including one that had perfectly skewered his throat. Every prick and piercing infuriated him.

The blood stallion kicked a man behind him, striking him squarely in the belly, with enough force to splatter his guts.

He bit another human on the shoulder, clamping down hard with his fangs, and then promptly lifted the naked male off his feet. Shrieking in agony, the man used his strong right arm to hit the stallion squarely in the neck with a devilishly sharp tomahawk. The blade peeled back a flap of white mane and bloody horseflesh before glancing off a black undead spine.

The gore gushing out of the man’s shoulder tasted awful. And with his blood flowed a stream of human memory...

His tribe was the Cheyenne. They were a spiritual people who had legends of “losing the corn.” They revered the buffalo and hunted it out of need, not maliciousness. In that regard, they were not so different from coyotes or any other predator.

In his youth, after walking one of their battlefields, the great white stallion came to believe that all humans were ruthless destroyers. But now, in this waking nightmare, he encountered some people who were cruel, and some who were spiteful, but none who were especially evil. Their general good nature only served to make him angrier.

Two more arrows thunked into his side. Throwing down the dying man, the raging undead horse turned and chased down two archers.

He trampled men, women, and children. He kicked and bit, killing with both hoof and fang. At one point, he chomped down tight on a screaming woman’s long black hair, while simultaneously stomping on both her feet. He then proceeded to yank the her head off.

Sensing exactly how to inspire both horror and terror, the hell-horse kept the scalp clamped in his mouth, carrying the head around, slaying the rest of the tribe with only his hooves.

Babies bawled. Mothers moaned. The wounded whimpered. The rampaging steed silenced each in turn.

Many Cheyenne fled, running for their lives, hiding where they could. With his infrared vision and unholy sense of smell, the undead monster tracked them all down. He tortured them out of hatred. He killed them in a dark red fury. He murdered every last one of them.

When he was done, his victory was soured. Their blood was too repulsive to sate his need.

He was still plagued by that same terrible thirst.

⚡🩸_______________________🩸⚡

In his zeal to kill all the humans, he allowed their horses to escape.

Now— the glorious massacre regrettably done— the undead steed instinctively followed the equine odor.

After traversing only a short distance across the prairie, he caught the scent of his old herd, much stronger than the odor of the tamed horses, although much farther away. He turned in the direction of the wild ones, racing toward them with the fleetness of the damned.

When he finally saw the herd, a blood froth foamed in his mouth. He was consumed with a rapacious hunger. Sensing his cannibalistic intent, his brethern fled from him, just like they bolted three nights ago when chased by the wolf pack.

He selected a sleek amber mare, taking a quick (deeply satisfying) bite out of her haunches, before grabbing the horse’s tail and pulling her down. She didn’t struggle long; he quickly broke her two hind legs with vicious jabs of his hooves. The mare didn’t even have time to scream before he ducked his face under her chin and sank his fangs into her neck.

This blood sated! This blood was wondrous! Taste ruled his mind!

When the mare’s heart collapsed, he chased down and killed another horse.

Then another after that.

Finally, the stallion was so glutted, blood spilled out of his eyes, ears, and nostrils. Only then was he stricken with an appalling realization.

Horses were no longer his kindred! He wasn’t a noble equine any longer! He was no longer pure! He was a vampire— corrupted, violent… vile!

The blood stallion experienced such overwhelming grief, his body fell apart, becoming a crimson mist. The arrows that had still impaled him now dropped to the ground. Undead molecules rode a salty updraft. Looking down on the three lifeless mares from high above, the ethereal steed wept.

The moon and the stars mourned with him.

Coyotes and wolves sang sorrowful duets.

⚡🐺______________________🐺⚡

Hours later, the great white stallion stood on a rocky butte, looking northeast. Somewhere in that direction, he sensed Wallace Wellington had reached his homeland.

The vampire horse knew his creator would eventually return to hunt him. Wellington would never relent until he had either killed the stallion or tamed him.

The pale horse derived undeniable (shameful) satisfaction from slaughtering the Cheyenne (who Wellington confusingly thought of as ‘Indians’). He knew that if he were to join Wallace in his quest to slaughter ‘savages,’ it wouldn’t be without its rewards.

But the idea of joining the human was repellent to him.

Wellington had destroyed his agrarian life! It was because of Wellington that he would never forge another river... or ever again feel the warmth of the sun! By day, he would forever need to hide away in some cave, like a lowly bat! All his sexual urges were dead! When he thought of his old mares— all he felt was a surging bloodlust!

Rage quickly cooked under the pressure of his undead brain.

The deadly vampire stallion would never serve that slave owner!

A fateful decision made, he said goodbye to his new contemplative mind, yet another product of Wellington’s intervention, just another thing to hate. Hurdling down the side of the butte, he galloped northeast. The storm that passed through had veered south. The sky was clearing.

Once again, he ran as swift as he was able, tearing across the flat countryside like a purposeful lightning bolt ⚡‼

He charged toward the gathering light.

Skirting around all rivers and streams and other sources of running water, he still was able to run many long last miles. Just before daybreak, every hair stood up and every nerve inside the stallion began to jangle. Sensing the terrible danger he was in, every muscle sought to reflexively turn away.

He didn’t give in to the impulses of his alarmed body. His spirit would be liberated!

Sol slipped above the horizon. The clouds parted as if he willed it. Direct beams of searing sunlight struck the bloody steed. His mane and tail instantly burst into flames. The pain was excruciating. All his preternatural senses now conspired to create burning torment.

The stallion lowered his head and ran ever swifter toward the deadly sunrise.

Just before he became a fireball, his blood-sheen evaporated. For a single instant, he was pure again— clean. He was himself again and he laughed in jubilation.

The next instant, he exploded.

Flaming hoof-prints continued on for another three miles, beyond the fiery flashpoint.

The great white stallion was free.

⚡ THE END ⚡

If you enjoyed this blast from the past ☝ ... consider checking out this more modern horror story! It's a dark romance between a poet and a poser. Check it! 👇

Thank you kindly for your support!

_______________________Bolt

[email protected]

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About the Creator

Lightning Bolt

From out of the blue, _Bolt writes horror galore, Sci-Fi, Superheroes & strange Poetry + MEME-ing MADNESS X12.

Vocal needs a Comedy Community!

Proud member of the Vocal Social Society on Facebook.

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Outstanding

Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!

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  1. Compelling and original writing

    Creative use of language & vocab

  2. Excellent storytelling

    Original narrative & well developed characters

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Comments (2)

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  • Violet LeStrange2 years ago

    As the kids say these days, your story slaps! I can genuinely say I’ve never read anything like this before and that it works so well is phenomenal.

  • Victoria Bamber2 years ago

    😱that was FANTASTICALLY written! I loved it! You’re very skilled/talented o_O-hearted, subscribed etc! :)

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