Chapter One:
Where Sorrow Seems To Follow Our Heroine
In The Year of Our Lord, 1492, influenza swept through
England like a violent storm. The sobs of the dying echoed
through the ravaged streets and the tears of loved ones
disappeared in the rain–drenched filth of the
alleyways. The village of Hampstead was no exception to
such devastation. Even King Henry had escaped to the
country for clean air.
For Phillipa Redmond, death had become all too familiar.
It had haunted her for the past year, taking her parents
within a week of each other. Then her five
siblings—one after the next. She'd shed the last of
her tears when her youngest brother, Peter, had finally
succumbed to the terrible sickness. Peter's body was still
upstairs, covered in the white linen sheet she'd pulled
over him, and locked behind his bedroom door—as if
that would keep the sickness from permeating the rest of
the house. But one had to follow the law in times like
these.
The meat wagon hadn't been around to collect Peter's
body, even though she'd sent word two days before. She'd
received a missive back that the dead by far outnumbered
those who were working to bury them properly. Peter would
have to wait.
Phillipa cast one last glance at her home, memorizing
the way the stair banister curved in a smooth arc of
mahogany and the way her mother's prized vase from France
sat in a position of importance in the entryway, the
flowers long since wilted. Tears gathered at the corners of
her eyes, but she blinked them back rapidly. She could no
longer afford the indulgence of tears. She had to think.
And think quickly. The orders to evacuate had already been
given. She had a grandmother in Scotland, though she'd only
met her once when she was quite young. There was really no
choice in the matter. Her grandmother was her only hope.
She took a deep breath and wrapped her dark red cloak
around her tightly, lifting the hood so it covered her
head. The cloak was lined with white rabbit fur, and the
fabric was a wool so smooth and unblemished it felt almost
like skin. It had been a gift from her parents for her
eighteenth birthday, the last birthday she'd gotten to
share with them.
The echo of footsteps shuffling from the village streets
below her family estate could be heard through the thick
English oak of her front door. The survivors were already
fleeing Hampstead.
She said a quick prayer for courage and walked out of
her home, down the tree–lined dirt road, and into the
streets of Hampstead with the others. The crowd was
bedraggled and unkempt—men, women and children she'd
never seen before without so much as a hair out of place.
No one spoke. Everyone's eyes were cast downward, focusing
on putting one foot in front of the other.
Phillipa glanced one last time at the home she'd grown
up in. There was a red slash of paint across her front
doorway that could be seen even from a great distance,
signifying to all who walked by that the house was
contaminated.
She'd see that slash of red in her dreams for eternity.
She looked at the cottages of her father's charges as
they continued to shuffle to the outskirts of the village.
The wind had turned chilly and a light drizzle fell and
clung to her lashes, so she pulled her cloak tighter. The
doors of the cottages held similar red marks. It had been
so long since she'd left her home she hadn't realized the
extent of the devastation that had wreaked havoc through
her village over the past weeks.
The palace had sent knights to all the villages to make
sure the laws were followed. They sat rigidly atop their
horses, their heads uncovered and water dripping from the
steel plates of their armor, as they herded the survivors
out of Hampstead. No one was allowed to bring any
possessions—no animals or food, no carriages or
clothing—only what they could carry as they fled for
their lives.
Phillipa had a small, painted likeness of her family,
dried fruit, a thin volume of poems, a few coins, and a
hair ribbon tucked away in a pocket that had been sewn
inside her cloak.
They made it to the outskirts of the village just as
dusk was setting in. Small groups of people set up camps
under a thick copse of trees, shielding themselves from the
wind and rain. Leaves were gathered for beds and animals
were hunted for food.
Phillipa stood in shock, alone and separated from the
others. She was eighteen years old and had never stepped
outside without her maid or a proper escort. But now she
had no one. There wasn't anyone to bring her food or lay
out her clothes. No one to dress her hair.
Screams shook her from her stupor. Her reactions were
slow; her senses weighed down so everything seemed as if it
were in slow motion. She didn't realize what the orange
glow was until the others started weeping and pointing.
Hampstead was burning. The knights had set fire to all the
homes and bodies that carried the disease. And now she
didn't have anywhere to call home.
Black smoke filled the sky as the sun finally set behind
the trees. The soldiers kept anyone who dared from trying
to return to town, herding them further into the forest
like chattel. No one spoke, though weeping could still be
heard. Small fires were made and the smell of roasting meat
couldn't drown out the stench of the thick smoke that
filled the sky.
Phillipa made her way to a large tree and sat at its
base, huddling into her cloak as the wind picked up. Howls
rent the air and she tried to keep from jumping with
fright. The people around her began to whisper, and her
teeth started to chatter as Sir Harry Waldrop—an
acquaintance of her father's—began to tell the
stories she'd never believed as a child. Now, she wasn't so
sure.
"It's said the woods are filled with savage beasts," Sir
Harry began. The crowd moved closer to him and he lowered
his voice further. "Those who have seen them say they've
been cursed by the devil himself. They can walk as humans
in the day, but when the night falls, their skin rips and
their bones break until they stand in the form of a wolf.
Their teeth are sharp and as long as sabers, and their
claws can slice a man in two."
Women in the group gasped, while the few children who
remained tried to hide their faces. Phillipa herself was
scooting farther away from the group, shaking her head in
denial at Sir Harry's words.
"If you see one," he continued, "You are as good as
dead. You can't outrun them. And you can't reason with
them, for they have the minds of animals. They won't show
mercy. And they say their leader is the worst of them all."
A man spoke up from the back of the group, and Phillipa
thought she recognized the voice of Mr. Gillingham. "How
can their leader be any worse, if what you've said of these
beasts is true?"
"Their leader is said to be soulless. The only one of
their kind who was never actually human to begin with. He
was spawned by the devil, and he is the cruelest, most vile
creature in all of England. Maybe even the world. They call
him Wulf."
Murmurs of sound rushed around her and Phillipa kept
scooting farther and farther away from the people, not
caring that leaves were getting tangled in her cloak and
that dirt covered her hands.
"The stories aren't true, you know," a deep voice said
from over her shoulder.
Phillipa drew in a breath to scream, but before a sound
could escape, a hand clamped over her mouth and an arm
tightened around her middle.