Blood in the Sand (Character Challenge #9)
James
He dances under neither me as we walk onto the beach. The crowd is all around us, cheering on their favorites. Cheering for victory. Cheering for blood.
I take a deep breath as the riders line up. This is it. I think searching the masses for familiar faces, but from atop Caddoc everyone looks so small, so insignificant.
"Hey James!" A voice calls. I turn in the saddle and watch as Marcus pushes his way to the front, Butch limping close behind. "We just wanted to wish you good luck." He smiles offering me his hand.
"Thanks." I say taking his hand tentatively and shaking it.
"I think you'll win." Marcus says with an easy grin before moving away from a crowd of raging horseflesh.
I almost laugh, turning my gaze back to the stretch of beach I front of me. I don’t tell him that I'm not racing for the money; I get enough for managing the bar during the week. I'm not doing it for glory. I am doing this to proof to myself I belong here. To prove even though Thisby is not my birthplace, it is my home.
Earlier
I hold up the silks, turning them over in my hand. The red and gold fabric of the blanket shimmers in the light as I lay them down gently across my weather beaten saddle. The dark brown of the tooled leather makes the colors more vibrant.
“Good colors.” I say out loud to myself before folding the matching shirt and placing it on my disheveled bed. I hoist the saddle up on to my shoulder and start towards Caddoc’s pasture. I can’t help but feel nervous. It is our last day of training,
Ruffian whinnies across the paddock as he sees me approaching and trots along the fence, playfully trying to nip at my hair.
“Shove off.” I laugh, pushing the great black snout away. The old bay snorts a retort and tosses his head, this time pulling at the girth laid unbuckled across the saddle’s seat. With a strong tug, the saddle slips off my shoulder and Ruffian canters off his prize held high, metal buckets jingling like November bells.
“Hey! Get back here ya’ old fool!” I shake my head, climbing over the fence and jogging over to wear the girth has been abandoned. Ruffian nickers innocently and walks slowly over.
“Old demon.” I laugh and pat his nose, only to be sneezed on. Wiping bits of grass and spittle from my shirt I walk back over to the fence. Once over I grab my saddle and endure my way to Caddoc’s stall.
“Wow.” A voice said behind me. “You look like shit.”
I continue to wipe down the saddle, gently rubbing out the sand and grime imbedded in cracks and crevices. Marcus has become my constant shadow ever since I saved his dog. Part of me hates the company, but another part never realized how lonely I’ve been since Charlie’s death.
“Yeah well, so do you.” I mutter in response, sliding past Marcus and Butch. He laughs at that looking down at his blood stained shirt and muddied boots.
“Hey, it was a busy day! All the damn capaill uisce need a bucket of blood it seems like.” I grab the pail from Marcus’s hand and walk over to Caddoc’s water bucket. Marcus doesn’t move; choosing to stay back with Butch, instead of braving the capaill’s toothy grin.
Caddoc sticks his head out of the stall, screaming softly when he catches the scent of the dog. Butch whimpers and cowers behind his master, slowly poking his head out to eye the capaill. The water horse strains against the stall door, reaching his long neck out, tilting his head from side to side to get a better look at his almost meal.
Marcus
“Caddoc, back down.” He say softly, spitting in his hand and pushing the capaill’s head back into his stall, his ear swinging to follow the sound of James’s whispering. The water horse makes a sound, halfway between the mewl of an injured kitten and the howl of a mournful wind.
James slowly shuts the grills of the stall door as Caddoc turns to his fresh bucket of blood and begins to drink it. With Caddoc occupied, Butch jumps out from behind me and barks triumphantly at the horse behind bars.
James watches the dog with a slight smirk and turns back to me. “That attitude is gonna get your dog killed.”
“Here’s to hoping.” I say lightheartedly, jokingly glaring at Butch as he hobbles back and forth in front of the stall.
James’s smirk just widens, his head shaking as his capaill lunges against the stall, screaming in frustration. He grabs a cloth and lifts bridle off the hook next to Caddoc’s stall, and begins cleaning it.
I watch him for a bit the rhythmic movements oddly comforting. “So James.” I say breaking the silence. “Are you ready for tomorrow?” I nod to the racing colors dramatically draped across the dark leather of the saddle.
James’s gaze turns to the red and gold. “No.” he says simply. Like his one word response answers all the questions forming in my mind. I watch James, waiting for something more of an explanation.
“Um . . .Why not?” I say, more curious than anything. I know I’m prying but it’s not like I’m expecting a response. James Rainey is a mystery, and I’m sure he wants to stay that way.
He considers me for a moment, his gaze looking me up and down. In that moment I realize how vey alike the capaill uisce and James Rainey are. His stare is something predatory, something dangerous. “Why don’t you come inside for some coffee?” He says. It’s a suggestion, but something about the way James hangs back up the bridle and opens the grills to Caddoc’s stall makes it seem more like s demand.
I leave the house later that night, Butch at my heels as we walk down the road towards my humble home. The night is dark but in the moonlight I can see the key in my hand. James’s words still ring in my ear.
Take care of my brother’s horse…
James
He dances underneath me. The energy on the beach is electrifying, and the rhythmic pounding of the sea is a steady call to the horses. It isn’t until we all line up, horses screaming in anticipation for the race, that I realize just how many riders are competing. Stone-faced men and women fight to control their eager capall as the crowd of tourists and islanders move to the cliffs to watch.
I lean down and stroke Caddoc’s neck, holding his attention for a brief moment. “Don’t let me die…” I whisper softly.
And suddenly we are all moving. The race begins in an explosion of horseflesh and sand. Caddoc takes me charging down the beach, his ears pricked and following the capaill in front of us with a ribbon weaved through her tail. The white shimmer of the charm has caught his attention, making the race more of a wild hunt across the sands. I move the bit in his mouth, my whisper almost becoming a yell over the music of the races as I call Caddoc’s attention back to me. He opens in mouth and screams, turning sharply from the white-ribboned tail to focus on the stretch of sand ahead.
The cheer of the crowd erupts as the riders thunder past, horses tearing into each other as they vie for the lead. A rider on a dark stallion is to my left, the capaill’s long neck snaking out as we move down the track. I glace over, my eyes meeting that of the rival rider as we gallop, shoulder to shoulder.
And in an instance, our eyes break apart. The rider’s capaill screams and stumbles, crushing the man as he falls to the ground. The stallion lets out one last choking cry and lays still, his throat open and bloody. I tear my gaze away, the scene of gore and death only made worse by the droplets of blood flying up to splatter my face from Caddoc’s jaws.
His stride lengthens as we enter the last turn of the beach. Somewhere in the scrabble Caddoc was bitten and blood leaks down his chest, mixing with the sand below us. Relief floods my body when I catch a glimpse of the waving flags marking the finish line. I made it. I think to myself, patting Caddoc’s neck.
That’s when I see the capaill.
Marcus
They swarm down the track like a storm. A dapple grey and sooty bay fight for first, their riders locked in a wordless battle. The pair holds everyone’s attention, but my eyes dart across the pack of riders looking for the red and gold of James and Caddoc. In the last moments the dapple grey in white pulls ahead of the sooty bay in red and purple for the lead, both closely followed by the dark bay in black.
The crowd drowns out the sea as the dapple grey crosses the finish line, it’s rider lifting a fist in victory. As the cheers echo around the beach, I see him. Caddoc gallops in, his rider pressed close along his back, only slowing slightly as they cross the finish line. I move from my seat and head down the cliffs to congratulate the riders. Butch barks from behind me, his ears pricked towards the screams of horses.
“I’ll be right back.” I yell to the dog and make sure the key is still in my pocket. I can see James better now, his face splattered with dirt and blood. He slips off of Caddoc, the reins held limply in his hand. Our eyes meet for a moment, before he drops to his knees left arm at an odd angle, bleeding profusely.
“James!” I yell my voice hardly a whisper. I push my way through the crowd, dodging photographs and bloodthirsty horses. Caddoc regards me coldly, one ear focused on my approach and the other pinned flat against his head. I slow down, as I try to reach my fallen friend. The capaill hisses, pinning both ears and moving closer to James. The beast snaps his jaws, standing over his rider. Our eyes lock for a moment; my gaze filled with fear, Caddoc’s calculating my every move.
James
I have no clue how I make it home but some how I end up waking up on my clutered couch, a scruffy dog staring up at me intently. Butch whimpers happily, his stump of a tail thumping against the floor as I reach out and pat the top of his head. I wince as I sit up, a pain jolting through my left arm.
“I don’t think it’s broken.” Someone says from the kitchen, as I pick at the blood stained bandage. “But I still wouldn’t take it off.” I look up at Marcus and slowly stand.
“I take it you’re the reason I’m still alive.” I say, a way of thanks as I move slowly over to where Marcus stands in the doorway of the kitchen.
“Me? No.” He laughs pulling over a chair for me to sit in and grabbing a glass of water. “Blame Butch,” he says nodding to the dog that lay curled up in my abandoned spot on the couch. “He said we needed to return the favor.”
I snort a laugh and rotate my shoulder, the memories flooding back with the pain. The capaill had come fast and dangerous, it’s flat teeth digging into my arm as it tried to pull me from my own horse to the sea. I remember think that this was it. I was going to be dragged into the sea and feasted on by a capall. I don’t exactly remember crossing the finish line or stopping Caddoc. But I remember my eyes finding Marcus, remembering his promise, and somehow ending up in the sand.
“What happened?” I ask, leaning back in the chair.
“Well… you didn’t win.” Marcus says taking the chair across from me.
I can’t help but laugh out loud, cringing slightly as my arm screams in protest. “Really? I could have sworn I won.’ I say sarcastically.
Marcus joins in my laughter, running his hand through his hair. “The dapple grey won, in the white. I think his name was Cairde or something. The sooty bay in red and pink won second and the bay in black won third.”
I nod, trying to remember the capaill and their riders from the beach training and rider’s parade.
“I don’t know where he came from but a capaill grabbed your arm and tried to pull you off, somehow you stayed on and you passed the finish line. You fell off Caddoc; so I ran down to see what happened. But Caddoc wouldn’t let anyone get close enough to help you. He was standing over you like a guard dog or something. But he let me get past so I brought you here, and-“
“Where is he?” I interrupt, my eyes searching Marcus’s face for any hint of emotion. He won’t meet my eye.
“Um…” Marcus mutters looking away for a moment. “No one was able to catch him…. James… I’m sorry…we left him on the beach…” Marcus chokes the last part out, unable to meet my gaze.
I squeeze my eyes shut for a moment, my mind racing. “He returned to the sea?” I say finally, my voice quivering.
“I don’t know.” Marcus says, with a sigh. “He followed us for a bit then stopped.”
I stand up abruptly, ignoring my arm screaming in pain, and leave the house.
“James…” Marcus calls after me but I ignore him.
Outside I can’t fight the tears, my whole body shaking in a silent sob as I lean against the fence of Ruffian’s pasture. The old bay stays a good distance away from me, one ear pinned on me and the other focused on something behind him. I can hear the sea all around me, the steady rhythm only cut by a soft keen.
A scream for blood and an evening meal of slabs of beef.









