The Woods at Night

This is Part One of a three-part short story. If you enjoyed this, check out Part Two and Part Three.

The old willows groaned with the weight of the wind at their backs, their branches creaking and cracking beneath the pressure. Rain lashed down as forks of lightning soared across the sky and thunder shook the sodden ground below. A young couple trudged hurriedly through the forest, their clothes covered in mud, tattered and dishevelled.
‘Run, Ainé!’ said the boy, throwing back his arm for the girl lagging behind.
Ainé held her hand out to grasp it, struggled through the soft earth to reach it and stumbled over a hidden root, falling to the ground. She lay disheartened, her arms slack at her sides, and began to weep.
‘We should never have left! My father would have seen sense! He would have known that I'd not wed another!’ she said. ‘Why now, Calder? Why tonight?’
Calder came to a suddent stop. He turned about and saw the woeful form of Ainé in the mud, her once stunning figure now covered from head to toe in blood, sludge and scratches.
‘Because there can be no other!’ he said. ‘My father has sold me to the pig men. He couldn't pay their tithe! If we didn't run tonight...’
He paused to wipe away the soggy hair that clung to his face and looked around. With the heavens hammering down upon them and the forest stealing all but the faintest of light from the world , Calder was, for all intents and purposes, blind. Only the frequent flashes from the storm overhead allowed some glimpse of his surroundings, yet even then, all the young man could glimpse was tree after tree stretching out across the horizon.
Had he made a mistake in fleeing? Had there been a better way? He knew now that there was no going back. They had ran swiftly into the night, knowing Ainé's father would have the hounds at their heels before too long. He had never planned to go so deep into the forest. Swept up in the burning emotions of their flight however, they paid no heed to any path.
‘If we didn’t run tonight,’ he said ‘then we’d be lost to each other forever.’
Ainé continued to cry, unmoved from the spot where she fell. Her hands splashed into the ground and spattered her once brilliant hair with muck.
‘Bring me home, Calder’ she said. ‘I just want to go home.’
‘I can't.’
Calder had never seen Ainé like this. The loving smile she had always given him was nowhere to be seen. He felt his heart wrench as her sobs grew louder.
‘Why? We can find another way! A safer way! You can hide! I can hide you! We’ll die out here! We'll drown or be eaten by wolves!’ said Ainé between tears, her desperation plain to see.
‘The wolves are gone from this land, Ainé. There’s no reason to be afraid. All we need do is escape this storm. If we go a little further—’
Several barks broke out in the distance, silencing Calder and prompting Ainé to gasp and rise to her feet, hugging her breast tight. Was he wrong? Did wolves still prowl these parts? He steeled himself for Ainé’s sake. It would not do either of them any good if they were both cowed by fear.
‘Ainé, if we go a little further, we'll be free of this place and back on the road. Please. Ainé, just a little further.’
‘Just get me home!’ she said. Her desperation turned to anger and she spat the words at Calder. ‘Get me out of this wretched hell!’
‘I can't!’ screamed Calder. ‘I’ve lost the way. We've been running too long!’
Ainé said nothing and Calder too remained silent, afraid that if he said anything else, that the imperceptible attraction that lay between the two would be broken. They stayed like this for a long time, their eyes locked on one another as the rain and wind soaked and chilled them to the bone. Then barks broke through the dead air that hung between them and they were moved to action. Those were no wolves, Calder realised. Those were the hounds of Ainé's father, locked onto the lover's scent trail.
'Run!' cried Calder, grabbing Ainé harshly by the wrist and forcing her to move with him.
They ran faster than they had before, the threat of the hounds now real at their backs. At times, the cry of the dogs sounded louder, then they would be but a brief utterance in the howling wind and lashing rain. After some time, their baying could no longer be heard and the young couple began to slow. They were unrecognisable now as the tailor's boy and baron's daughter that they had begun the night as. Scratches and bruises covered their arms, legs and faces. Their clothes were barely hanging on by a thread and their hair was a matted, muddy mess.
Greetings Reader! Welcome to The Rambler. In this first post, I'd like to convey my vision for this blog and give you an idea of what you can expect over the coming weeks and months. On this humble corner of the internet, I hope to deliver interesting articles, engaging stories, opinionated reviews and even more opinionated editorials from myself and other writers.
Along with some short fiction and various other writerly pursuits, I hope to post articles on a multitude of other topics - from PC maintenance and software development to art, politics entertainment, cooking, and so much more. To that end, I've set about gathering authors to form the backbone of the blog and help to make that vision a reality. My hope too is that you, the reader, can and will contribute to the blog with your own articles.
As we move forward, we'll be setting up a procedure for submitting your articles to us for review and if those articles are something that we feel other readers might find interesting, we'll publish it.
Those of you that fear your writing quality isn't up to snuff for the general public need not be hesitant either as I'm more than happy to pick over your writing with a fine tooth comb and improve its quality while maintaining your personal charm and ultimate point.
All that is yet to come and what we have for now is a child. It looks like a blog, it works like a blog but it still has to grow and it will falter and crawl before it succeeds and runs. To that end, I want to ask for your patience and understanding as links go nowhere, changes are made in quick succession and content remains thin on the ground. But that isn't to say that you shouldn't stick with us! Bookmark the site or follow us on your preferred social media platform (or all of them!) and come back often.
For now, I'll sign off with a thank you. Thank you for taking the time to click whatever link led you here. Thank you for reading this first of many articles and thank you for any comments and feedback you have.
Since you're here, have a read of the first of a three-part short story: - Flight: The Woods at Night. It tells the tale of two lovers in the midst of eloping. Things don't go quite as planned for the young couple however and they slowly start to think that running away may not have been the best decision.

About the Author
Declan is a software engineer and creative writer. In 2015, he established The Daily Rambler to deliver interesting articles to an interested audience. With vim and gusto, he attacks the world with his searing wit and dashing good looks.