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He couldn’t see through the window –which his father had barred - but he knew that his little friend was sitting on its edge.
“Hello, Ebony,” he sighed, and the black cat mewed back. He knew this cat from when he’d been able to see; it was the only feline that would come near him. For some reason, most cats…disliked him. He wanted so badly to hold the cat to him, for some kind of comfort, but he knew that even if he could, he mustn’t allow himself to do so. His own body would rob the cat of its warmth, and he, no doubt, would try to drink from it after all these years of deprivation. “How have you been, boy? Have you been beaten up again too?” The cat mewed again. He laughed. The cat had a habitof fighting. He always had many battle scars; it seemed to attract other cats into skirmishes. He could smell Ebony’s blood in the air, and knew that he was right. He shivered from his hunger, and swallowed the extra saliva. He couldn’t afford wishful thinking…he shook it off.
“Did you try to beat up a dog again? I told you before, that wouldn’t work. You’re simply too small.” The cat made a growling sound, as if it resented being called small, but soon fell silent. After a few moments, Gabriel sighed.
“I’m sorry. I didn’t mean that, I know you’re tough… but I do worry. You’re my only friend, Ebony.” Ebony, he could hear, was purring in response. Then he mewed, and just like that, the padded footsteps were fleeing again. “Until tomorrow, then.” He sighed. He had grown used to the cat’s swift retreats. He jumped, startled, as he heard the sound of the lock. Ebony always cut their visits short if his father was coming; he wanted to smack himself for not remembering. The cat seemed to have a supernatural sense, and left as if it had a premonition of his father’s coming.
“Gabriel,” Richard sneered.
“Asshole,” he replied. Then he heard the man pick something up, and grew worried. There was usually a faint swish in the air if it was a whip, but this didn’t sound like that. He yelped in pain, cursing himself for cursing his father, as something square and hard hit him in the back of the head.
“Shut up! You have no privilege to talk. I do hope you like bricks…” and then he was struck again. He used his hands and covered his head, cringing from the pain. He had grown too cocky… he was going to be hurt worse than normal, and he knew it. The brick smashed over his fingers, and he screamed as he realized that Richard had broken the middle three on his right hand, which had been crossed over his left. “I said shut up!” He heard a thud as Richard dropped the brick on the other side of the floor, and heard a ripping sound he recognized as someone pulling duct tape off a role. He tried to move, but his arm was clamped in its chain, so he was trapped. His father grabbed his wrists with one of his hands, taping them together, and covered Gabriel’s mouth in duct tape as well.
He was released, but only for a moment. Then Richard was back; he pushed Gabriel down and pinned him on the floor with his foot. He pushed at the older man’s leg with his arms, a useless attempt. Seconds later, Richard replaced his foot with a strong hand to hold him down, and punched Gabriel in the stomach with the other. The boy breathed in quickly through his nose.
“How’s this feel, you worthless son of a *****??” Richard was shouting, and Gabriel could smell the waves of adrenaline flowing from the human man. He couldn’t speak, however, as his father continued to punch him there, over and over, and then finally stood up to begin kicking him. He coughed up blood, choking as it slid back down his throat. He swallowed it to avoid that, and felt slightly better as a result. Hetried to cover his stomach, but received a kick to the head when he did, so he forced himself to let the man beat him. He had to tire out sooner or later…
It had been an hour. Gabriel lay in his cell, breathing shallowly, as Richard exited with a satisfied smile on his face. Gabriel didn’t have to seeto know the look was there; the man’s smugness was glaringly obvious. He couldn’t make himself care, however; he was, he knew, a pitiful sight. He lay on the floor, half-way in the fetal position, clutching his stomach gently with his trapped arms. Blood was splattered across the floor from Richard’s earlier action; he’d thrown Gabriel’s head into the ground a number of times in a row. He was suffering an enormous headache. There was a puddle of the crimson fluid under his head, and more was adding to it, flowing from his mouth. Richard had removed the duct tape from his mouth earlier, bored with it. He had said he’d wanted to hear Gabriel’s screams… to see his blood.He’d taken off the cloth as well, to see the fear in Gabriel’s eyes. He coughed, and more blood flew a short distance to the wall.He felt surprised that his eyes had made a full recovery, but he was thankful for it. It had probably come from him drinking his own blood…Richard didn’t know how big of a mistake removing that cloth was. Because soon, Gabriel knew as he moved his hand across the floor, he would escape. His eyesight could help him now. He could feel it as he licked the blood off his hand; he would get out of this prison within the next three days… even if it killed him. That much he was sure of, even as he passed out…
“Hey mommy,” Gabriel walked up to Nicole, who was sitting at the kitchen counter.
“Yes, sweetheart?”
“How come you don’t call me Gabe? I have a friend with the same name as me… his parents call him Gabe, though.”
“Because, baby…I didn’t name you Gabe. I named you Gabriel. In our culture, a name like that is never shortened, because of what it stands for.”
“What does it stand for?” He stared at her in wonder, his green eyes wide with interest.
“You have been named after Raina Chevelle’s mate. He was a truly powerful vampire… he was worshipped just as much as she was.”
“Who’s Raina Chevelle?”
“I haven’t told you? Well, she was a goddess…”
Gabriel shot up from where he lay, waking up to the sound of an enormous crack of thunder. It had to be loud to get to him through these walls… he cried out from the shock of pain that tore through his abdomen and fell back. The noise was shortly followed by another thunderous boom, though this one was less fearsome, and harder to hear.
“A storm… only a storm…” He swallowed, and then lay back down. He calmed down after taking a few slow, deep breaths, and closed his eyes. It worked, albeit slowly; the deep breaths had relaxed him, even though they had also caused him pain in his lungs. Within moments, exhausted as he was, he was able to ignore his pain and fall back into a fitful sleep…