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âTHERE! IT FELL FROM THE TOP!â A hysteric sounding woman screamed at the top of her lungs, a breath before cold steel opened up Glenâs face, who jerked away instinctively almost breaking his own neck, to avoid the worst of the damage. Most of it at least.
As he swung violently in the same breath but missed, all while riding the momentum into a miraculous backwards jump, -surely worth a place amidst the greatest feats ever performed, dodge-masters of the Thieves Guild included- Glen realized the blade had slashed away the lower part of his left ear.
âThatâs freakin' impossible,â The pink haired archer responded to Zolaâs outburst drawing her bowstring, ready to nail anything that popped out of the growing shadows. She sounded extremely worried and probably rightly so, as the flat top of the structure was standing at least twenty meters off the ground.
âCASS. GET THE ARCHER!â Dante thundered, himself not in the best of moods.
Glen felt the blood running down his neck. His ear was throbbing and heâd lost hearing from that side. Zestari flipped her swords expertly one after the other, tip of her tongue wetting her lower lip.
âI want that sword,â She said, eyes flickering sideways at the sound of an arrow zipping over their heads. The pink-haired girl cried out in disbelief as her loaded arrow was smashed to pieces, the arrowhead that had caused it missing her right eye for a hair.
A strangely melodic but familiar voice was heard speaking in broken common tongue.
âLeave now. Or perish.â
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Glen turned his head and caught sight of Lith standing at the pyramidâs base, orange eyes⦠wait, didnât she have another⦠glowing once alike a predatorâs watching calmly as Cassara charged her sword in hand, closing the distance between them fast. The female fighter was twice her size.
âWATCH OUT LAD!â Emerson barked and he moved without looking, one step then a roll to his right, knees scrapping the paved ground before stopping on his two feet, his left hand now holding the sculpted handle of the ancient dagger.
âMy, myâ¦â Zestari taunted from where he was standing but a second before. âAnother weapon. On top of un-knightly skills. Tell me your secrets boy.â
Glen, blood or sweat trickling down his ribs, his face burning like it was on fire and hurting ear hammering his brain, tried to swallow but realized he couldnât. His throat felt like the inside of a burned piece of wood. He blinked to keep his blurring eyes focused at least, but Zestari being a cunning bitch attacked seizing the opening. She faked a right hand slash again fast as a leopard, but Glen saw through it and moved to parry with his dagger.
Or so he thought.
For starters, Zestari went for his head wrong-footing him again.
Next, the slash had turned into a lethal thrust aiming for his eyes but Glen, despite getting fooled twice in a row, instead of mechanically dodging backwards per usual and die, stepped smartly to the side changing the whole dynamic of their duel.
Which wasnât the move heâd intended to do.
And last but certainly not least, the exotic dagger heâd initially envisioned parrying down to block her faint, went up on its own bloody volition and with a simple turn of his instictively synergizing torso neutralized the assassinâs attack.
Leaving her own side open for a strike.
Glen used his longsword like a scythe. It was a messy diagonal cut, delivered inwards with the wrong stance, which Zestari shouldâve seen coming from a mile away; had she not underestimated her young opponent so.
A fool can kill you.
Still she recoiled from the blade aiming for her ribcage and mostly pulled it off, which was in itself worthy of lavish praise. But mostly isnât what one wants when dealing with well-sharpened sword cuts. The longsword caught her retreating leg above the knee and bit it deep. Blood splattered down as she howled through gritted teeth, her leg buckling when she landed from her own desperate dodge.
âArgh,â She hissed clasping at the bleeding cut, face strained and eyes bloodshot. âHow in Oraâs black heartâ¦â
âIâve no clue.â Glen replied dumbfounded, staring at the ancient dagger in his hand. Was this thing vibrating? âJust started training really.â
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Zestari dropped one of her shortswords down and stumbled forward clenching her jaw. One long curl had freed itself and danced over her sweaty strained face, as she attempted a clumsy wide slash Glen easily avoided using his longer blade.
âWhereâs Reeves?â She hissed, pain turning to anger.
âDead.â
Probably still buried. Heâd slacked a bit with the stones towards the end.
âHow do you know? What was he to you?â
Glen grimaced trying to decide on a quick attack strategy that didnât involve him getting cut again. A curse interrupted his brief pause. The man with the axe had gotten a kick in the face that send him reeling again and Emerson turned to defend against the enraged attack of the burly swordsman, Glen didnât yet know the name of.
âKirk stand back dammit!â Dante ânot a scratch on him- yelled, answering him that, then offering a bit more troubling news. âHeâs poisoned, not long for this world.â
Kirk roared, for some reason all sense lost, eyes wild and foaming at the mouth and charged him anyway. Emerson, part of an arrow wedged in his chest armor, moved in to intercept and deflected the sword away with his vambrace, the blade biting hard enough to send sparks fly. An almost casual looking parry, heâd attempted a thousand times in the past for all Glen knew, then flipped his own sword end-over-end, butt pointing towards Kirkâs face, the blade parallel to his forearm.
Dante cried a desperate warning, but it was too late. In the same well-practiced manner Emerson rode the momentum and run the whole length of his blade against Kirkâs unprotected throat. Skin against steel.
Steel won.
Blood gushed out, some of it catching the armoured knight as he stepped away from his flailing opponent, flipping his sword again to bring its business end towards the stunned leader of the Gallant Dogs company. At the edge of his vision Glen saw the bloody-faced Northman getting up.
âDamn you,â Dante muttered. âFor forcing this.â
âDo it,â Zestari ordered gathering herself for another attack. âFinish him off.â
Glen wiped some of the blood off his neck feeling light headed and not particularly eager to fight her again. Sure he sort of had an advantage now with her being crippled and all, but all she needed was a bit of luck and basic skill to gut him like a pig. The woman had more than enough skill and Glen surely had emptied his luck tank by now.
Or so he thought.
âITâS A FREAKINâ OLD ONE!â Jinx shrieked from where sheâd hidden in the pandemonium thatâd ensued, after sheâd her arrow shot out her hands. Glen had completely missed her firing the shot thatâd struck the knight at the start of their fight. It wasnât clear to him, if she was injured as well or just scared of the now unseen Lith. âFuck it. Ainât fightinâ a Zilan in the open!â
âWhat?â Dante barked, face scrunching in a grimace of disgust for his mounting problems. âHave you lost your wits? Whisper, snap out of it!â Jinx jumped behind a broken column at the side of the ancient street instead of answering.
The leader of the Gallant Dogs took a step back to search for the elusive female demon himself, head snapping energetically right and left, until he finally spotted her next to their horses; longbow trained on them, taut bowstring pulled back to its limits. Lith, face slightly amused at the nose-less girlâs words and totally unbothered of the effort required to keep her bow perfectly still, raised a thin mocking eyebrow in greeting.
Then released.
The arrow zipped over the head of a panicky stooping Dante, flew half an arm away from a stunned gawking Glen and smacked the sneakily-lunging Zestari on the right side of her chest punching through thin leather armor. Her effort came to an abrupt end, before she was shoved violently back.
âGahâ¦â Zestari muttered spitting blood all over, staring in disbelief at the fletching thatâd sprouted out of her right breast, before her injured leg buckled again, this time bringing her down.
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âShit,â Dante said seeing their employer collapsed on her back, slowly bleeding away. âStand back!â He ordered the frowning Northman. The man paused, face and beard covered in blood, broken nose leaking like a rusty faucet.
âReckon ye wanna talk again?â Emerson asked not sounding too good himself, Glen thought kicking the shortsword away from the fallen woman. She stared at him with hateful eyes and tried successfully to push herself on her knees using elbows and sheer determination.
âWe have a contract Blackwood!â She hissed spitting blood down her jaw. âAll you have to do is kill the kid, the knightâs done for.â
Dante nodded but no one was eager to attack. Emerson seemed to be fading away, Glen didnât want to fight in the first place and Dante and his mercenaries were pretty banged up. Or dead. Lith was the only one untouched and Glen couldnât get a read on her.
Other than the fact that she had a new arrow trained on⦠well, all of them really.
âHow much is it?â Emerson asked in a tired voice.
Huh?
Dante seemed to get what the knight was selling.
âTwenty five. Gold.â
Emerson nodded, everyone listening now in bargaining mode. It happened so fast Glen had trouble grasping what was going on.
âLadâs good for it.â
âHuh?â Glen gasped his thoughts.
Dante shook his head.
âI lost two oâ mine,â He haggled shamelessly.
âLost me squire and reckon Iâm plaguinâ dying,â Emerson countered, the first part bothering him more than the second.
âYou⦠SON OF A WHORE!â Zestari cried out, teeth all bloody and face taunt, but no one paid her any attention.
âJinx?â Dante asked over her protests.
âYeah. I have a cureall.â The girl quipped, appearing behind her cover. Adding thoughtfully. âItâs expensive.â
âThirty.â Emerson said with finality. âThe lad will pay you.â
âYouâre all⦠dead! You hear⦠me, curse you!â Zestari growled fresh blood running down the sides of her mouth.
âGold Eagles?â Dante insisted.
âAye.â
âWaitâ¦â Glen started but Dante seemed pleased enough.
âThen we have a deal,â He announced sounding like a seasoned merchant and sheathed his longsword. âThis has gone far enough.â
Glen noticed he was also totally unscathed from their scrap.
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âI have to touch ye firmly, to pull it,â Jinx insisted in what was apparently her nurse voice, over a furious-looking Zola. âIt might take me a while so donât be too alarmed. Just close your pretty eyes.â
âGet your damn claw away!â Zola snapped trying to kick her between the legs but failing.
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âIt was an accident.â Jinx replied, too pretentious even for Glen to believe her. He had a cloth pressed on the side his head to stem the flow of blood, but it wasnât working that great and it did fuck-all for the pain. Or his hearing. Emerson approached him a little green in the face, dark circles under his eyes, but even so, looking better than most of them. A miracle surely, considering heâd drunk a whole bottle of what Glen believed was seasoned piss. In the best of circumstances. The weird girl had called it âmuh medicine.â
As if that wasnât bloody suspicious.
âHowâs the cut?â The knight asked not seeming particularly worried.
âThink I lost half-an-ear,â Glen said sullenly. âNot to mention, almost having another mouth where my left cheek was.â
âLatterâs good,â The knight replied.
âHow so?â Glen asked not seeing it that way.
âYe look too fresh. A scar helps in a fight.â
âUhm. While missing an ear donât. Right?â Glen probed sarcastically.
âI have no clue,â Emerson replied scratching his beard. âBut it makes for a shitty moniker.â
âRight,â Glen murmured, watching Dante and Soren looting the two siblings. Lith had shot four arrows into Cassara some-fuckin-how and Kirk just couldnât let go of it according to Dante. Glen couldnât fault the dead fighter. A sister worthâs more than a dog.
Probably.
âStupid to die from an arrow,â Soren said completely missing the point.
And the number of arrows.
âHad he listened to me, heâd be alive now,â Dante insisted hindsight backing him up, while pilfering the manâs sword and belt and throwing them in a large bag he carried.
Emerson nudged him with an elbow, forcing him away from their conversation.
âYou canât leave her here,â He said pointing at the still alive Zestari, although Glen thought, he very well could. She was staring their way with such intense hatred, Glen quickly looked away.
âWhy?â
âDonât ask stupid questions.â
âShe wonât make it.â
âShe killed Reeves⦠your father.â Emerson stared in his eyes meaningfully.
Yeah, forgot about that. Ye patronizing old turd.
Glen sighed.
âCanât leave her for the animalsâ lad. Itâs your responsibility.â
Zestari caught up to their intension.
âYou want revenge boy?â
âYou killed his father. Witch,â Emerson said before heâd a chance to smooth things over.
âHeâs dead then,â Zestari said sounding pleased, and for the first time, content. A strange thing really, since despite her managing to tie up her knee cut while no one was looking; that arrow wound seemed deadly. âYou best walk away. Forget⦠about revenge. People will come after you, if⦠you donât.â
âThese here people, werenât that interested.â
âMy sister. She will find you. He will⦠even if she canât. Selussa will never⦠let go. Too many know⦠of this.â
Blood trickled down the sides of her mouth. Less than before, Glen noticed.
âYou are not helping yourself.â He said standing over her. âCan you promise me, weâll forget about this?â He asked lowering his voice. The woman was too injured to survive another day, without medical attention. She might not make it, even if she found someone willing to help her. Red foam had appeared at the side of her lips now and where the shaft moved in the wound. Glen didnât want to kill her. He hadnât killed anyone before and had no intention to start in this forsaken place. Heâd no reason for it, despite what the knight thought.
Her eyes, a polished black were filled with wonder, which he found strange. Then it changed to what appeared to be understanding.
A chill run down his spine.
âYouâre⦠not angry,â Zestari coughed feebly. âNever⦠were. Is why⦠I couldnât get a read on you.â
âYouâre wrong,â He countered, but it came out weak.
âShe found⦠bodies. Washed ashore⦠days after. Selussa wrote, someone⦠got away,â Zestari continued, the words coming out more difficult now, but with more purpose. Glen glanced towards the knight and noticed him frowning. Standing as he was further back, it wasnât as easy to make out what she was saying. âYe found him⦠there,â Zestari added, face almost white now, along all that red. âItâs not yours.â
âWhat was that?â Emerson asked, his interest piqued.
Glen remembered the bolt zipping over his head.
The woman had no crossbow on her.
Not the same girl, he thought.
I want the shield, island boy.
Glen smelled the sea again.
Salt in his mouth.
Green rotten flesh ân white bones.
The corpse smiled because it knew.
Luthos, you dickless bastard.
âYou⦠will not kill me,â Zestari said triumphantly with the last of her strength.
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A Wyvern stirred.
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Glen punched upwards with his hand and buried the dagger -that had materialized there somehow- where her still half-opened mouth was. The black blade slipped under her front teeth, pierced through the palate severing her tongue in the process and ended up halfway into her brain.
Black blood burned his fingers.
He heard Zolla cry out in pain, the broken shaft pushed out at last, right before he stooped and puked his guts out next to Zestariâs lifeless body.
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When you steal for a living, you learn to notice stuff.
The sooner you start- and no one starts earlier than a kid whose mother died in childbirth and his father had a real wife on the side, to even bother searching for him- then the better you become.
At noticing.
Glen had walked like an automaton to the edge of the ancient road and sat down on a rock next to one of the many pillars, his back turned to their now quiet camp. Unseen in the darkness, but for the strong moonlight. The pillar was too big in diameter to hug with his arms. Not that he wanted to. He wanted a drink, wine if possible or ale, to wash his mouth from the bile. Numb himself to oblivion.
Some things you donât want to notice.
Or admit.
Truth was, heâd lost control of his actions back there. He shouldnât have won that fight or killed the woman without reason. He was neither a fighter of note nor a murderer.
A petty thief that had come upon a fortune.
Yes.
Not a cold blooded killer.
He stared at the stained dagger. The black blade caught a touch of light where the blood had washed away, but didnât quiver like before. Was it all in his head?
Not without reason.
âKeep your thoughts a secret,â A melodic voice said.
Lithoniela plopped down cross-legged across from him, fixing carefully around her a dark cape she was now wearing. Glen had seen the garment before. The short swords too.
âEveryone got something,â The Zilan explained gold eyes shining like stars for a moment. âI like it, but for the blood. But even that fades away.â
âI⦠ah.â
Glen started then stopped.
âThere was no other road,â She said in her exotic accent.
Protect the lie.
Glen wiped the blooded blade on his pants subconsciously.
âYou can understand our words.â
Everybody lies, he thought the words offering him little solace.
âFor a time,â Lith replied surprising him. âThen I forgot.â She showed him her sharp teeth, in the facsimile of a smile. âBut watching you Sinya Nore, some words came back.â
âI donâtâ¦â
âNew People,â Lith explained, her eyes dancing towards the sky. âMy mother used the first tongue, when she was angry.â
âWhat does Zilan mean?â
âStrong breeze or Evil Spirit.â
âWhich of the twoâ¦â
Lith put her hand on his chest to stop him firing more questions. Her fingers were really long and Glen could feel her nails tracing the thin material of his shirt.
> his blood-raiders forced to walk on land
>
> till he used a loverâs soft hand
A memory came, but quickly faded away.
âI will find you a decent leather vest.â
Glen nodded mesmerized.
âThatâs⦠thanks.â
âYouâll need proper armor. Canât fight in a coat.â
Ah.
âI will pay for it. For an armor. Apparently I have a lot of coin.â
Lith took her hand away.
âAs I said. Keep your thoughts to yourself.â
âSorry.â
The Zilan got up and stared at their campsite, now well-lit by a big fire.
âWe need to move in the morning,â She said.
âI havenât decided yet⦠anyway, we have some time,â Glen replied getting up himself, feeling a little better, but for the dull constant pain on his ear and face.
Everything else hurt him less.
âNo you donât,â She said. âCome, we need to take care of the wound.â
âThanks. Hey, what do you mean, we donât have time?â Glen asked as he followed her long strides.
âYouâve a missive to deliver.â
âWait. I havenât made up my mind yet.â
âUntrue.â Lith said. âThe blood on your blade leads us to Castalor.â
The female steered him towards the big campfire, but stopped a couple of meters away seeing Jinx had taken the first watch. The small-bodied ranger greeted them with a small bow of her pink head.
âStay. Your distance Gish.â Lith ordered in broken common.
âYes Mistress.â Jinx replied without batting an eyelash. âYouâll not see me near.â
He couldnât tell, if she was serious or condescending. Their exchange left him a strange feeling of foreboding. Many things did these past days, it seemed. Like everything around him was made out of many layers and he was slowly peeling them off, one at a time.
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You notice other things, Glen thought moments later as the female started working on his cuts.
Eyes that change colors.
A dagger that knows all tongues.
A touch of luck.
The hint of Magic.
Little things, you slowly learn.
Like for instance;
To wear another manâs skin
One must search till he finds,
unearth a myriad foul things,
hidden in his soul and other places.
Even a reason for murder.
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âWhat?â A troubled Glen asked some time later, sitting at the edge of the campfire, a safe distance away from their new allies. Or was it, employees?
âBeen talking to the lads,â Emerson said, dancing shades created by the flames hiding his wretched face. The poison had made a number of him in the end.
âAbout what?â
âThey buried their own,â The knight said solemnly. The carnage the last thing Glen wanted to remember. âThe siblings. Asked them to take care of her. But they wonât do it by themselves. Not for her. Still I insisted. Canât leave her for the vultures.â
Zestari.
Glen sighed, a shake returning in his right hand. He tried to stop it with his left and failing that, hid it inside his longcoat.
âNo. Thatâs terrible,â He croaked his agreement.
âAye. Thought youâd want to give a hand. Itâs the decent thing to do.â
After you killed her.
âI donât think⦠Iâm too banged up right now.â
Emerson nodded not looking at him.
âMakes sense. I will take care of it lad. You rest up now.â
âDid⦠they say anything else?â
âLike what?â
âAh, it donât matter.â
The knight pressed his lips in a tight line. Seemed as if he wanted to say something more, but then he decided against it and moved away. Glen breathed a sigh of relief. His body hurt him enough to want nothing more than a good nightâs sleep. He even closed his eyes to attempt it right then and there.
But try as he could during the night, he hadnât managed it. His mind was worrying. Over the strangers they shared a camp with, his gold coins now secured under his arse but common knowledge. Lith who was touched by magic and the perilous future ahead. Perilous because it was built on lies and deception.
He forced his eyes open after a while, hands wrapped around the dagger giving him comfort as the hours ticked away, partly because of all of the above -that much was true. But mainly out of fear heâd see the blade ruining her mouth again; the way blood poured out painting his hands a brilliant rubicund and the fleeting shocked look the woman gave him just a tiny horrible instantâ¦
Before life left her.
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