The Dark Sire Issue 2 (Winter 2019) | Page 34

Night Harvesters by Frances Tate The last vestiges of my humanity escaped on lengthening shadows. But whether that was this night or the night before, I could not say. Time is not marked as it once was. There are no recitals to prepare for, no invitations for afternoon tea or shopping trips. I cannot remember the last such event. What remains of my consciousness is an accidental gap in a morphine regime. These infrequent gaps are longest during the night. Heavy meals and excellent port leave the doctors soporific. Cheap brandy crafts somnambulists out of orderlies. The Harvester makes sure to keep all ‘secret’ supplies well-stocked. Since I stopped screaming and scratching, my sweat-stained near corpse has been left comparatively unmedicated. Medication. Irony pushes my face into a grimace of a smile. Medicine should suggest knowledge or at least benevolence. After being unwillingly admitted to this place for my own good I harbour serious doubts about the presence of either. And the casualties of my lost belief do not end there. The twelve-inch-long hardwood figure above my head surveys me knowingly. He is a mirror of my immediate past; betrayed, outcast, stripped and bled, and a silent testament to what happens next. Embracing immortality hurts. Thorns and nails for Him, rough leather cuffs and straps for me. He was not 32