‘Ha!’ The first one, he recognised, her voice being a bit sharper than the other’s. ‘Look at that. They come in green.’
‘A green pinky,’ the other one grunted. ‘I don’t remember them having long ears, neither.’
His back was still turned and they hadn’t attacked him yet. They were either supremely overconfident or desired a solution that ended without someone’s entrails stuffed up their own nose. Either way, he thought as he turned about, they would be surprised.
Of all the things he had expected to meet his narrowed eyes, however, he did not expect to stare at these … things.
They
The fact that they were purple was less of a concern than the swords at their waists. ‘And it has a stick,’ the one closest to him said. ‘A
‘Fun?’ the other one asked.
‘Ah, yes.’
‘
Even if they weren’t human, they were close enough for the insult to fit. And even if he refused to speak their language, he made sure his tone carried as much threatening edge as his raised stick.
At both, the two merely smiled broad white slashes filled with jagged teeth.
‘Look at that,’ one said, as she shook a round iron shield loose on her gauntleted wrist. ‘It wants to fight.’
‘We have duties to attend to,’ the other one muttered, sliding a short spike of dark iron from her belt. ‘Make it quick.’
‘
If they didn’t understand his words, they understood his intonation as they slid easily into rehearsed defensive stances. Their muscles trembled with constrained fury as they edged close to him, careful and cautious, every movement planned and poised, every inch of their lean bodies speaking of an iron discipline.
That lasted for all of three breaths.
‘
The other one was close behind her, cursing her companion’s recklessness and her own slowness. Naxiaw watched them come, watched the hate pour from their eyes over their shields, their spikes thirsty in their hands. He licked his lips, the stick resting comfortably and silently in his long fingers.
Then, he met their charge.
Tall as they were, they were compact creatures born of rocks, he recognised: too slow, too hard. He was
He smiled at the rearmost one’s baffled expression. They always wore it when he did that.
As broad as his smile was, his stick’s was broader, crueller. As he descended to the earth, the stick yearned to show its wooden teeth to her, to offer a brown-and-black kiss.
Naxiaw obliged it.
His stick struck her jaw with a loud crack, sent her staggering backward. He spared enough time to drive the stick’s head into her exposed belly, throwing her farther back. He could hear the other one turning around, hear her spike whining for his blood.
When that whine became a roar, he fell to the ground, heard the spike shriek iron frustrations over his head. He pressed his hands flat against the sand, hurled himself from the earth as his feet curled into fists and legs lashed out like coiled vipers.
He felt skin, then muscle, a shocking amount of muscle. More importantly, he heard her stagger backward, counted off her steps.
Then came the scream, fading as she took one step too many over the cliff face. One moment for a self- satisfied smile, then he was back on his feet, his Spokesman in hand, ready to make a final argument.
The other longface was up, far sooner than he expected, and her weapon was ready. He glowered; she was strong, resilient, but still a
Instead she settled back, waited for him to come to her. He obliged, darting past her thrust, ducking her shield and coming up inside her guard. Half a moment to savour her snarl, another to make sure she could see his large canines.
Then he struck.
The Spokesman had few words for her. It was not a weapon made for long, savoury stabs or vicious, sloppy chops. It spoke in short bursts, rapping against her jaw, then her clavicle, then her arm. Its arguments were sound, though, and reverberated inside her bones, each vibration compounded by the one that soon followed.
Naxiaw had learned well the ways of the Spokesman, heard its arguments voiced to over four hundred
He swung harder, sending her reeling back two steps, then retreated.
She did neither.
Instead, the longface rolled her neck, letting the vertebrae crack within. She flashed him a smile, her jagged teeth stained with only the most meagre trace of red. All her crimson was in the malice of her narrowed eyes.
‘Well,’ she hissed, ‘aren’t you just
She charged. He sprang. This time her hand was in the air, her metal fingers wrapped about his ankle. He had never truly felt the earth until she gave a sharp tug and slammed him down upon it in a spray of sand.
Another quick jerk and he was back on his feet, her turn to savour his baffled expression, his turn to see her jagged teeth. In a snap of her neck, his entire world became her teeth as she drove her head against his face. He felt bones snap under the thin flesh of his nose, blood spurt out in a great slobbery kiss.
‘Ha!’ she cackled. ‘
Even as he reeled back, his own crimson trickling down upon the earth, he could not help but smile. Her own smile was undiminished, even as his blood painted her face in a spattering red mask.
They always looked that way, right before it started to burn.
Her grin turned to angry befuddlement, then to anger proper, and then back to shock as her smile grew wider, skin stretching tight about her face. He savoured each twitch, each expression, each moment before it invariably ended the same way it always did …
‘It burns,’ she grunted. ‘It … it
His venom-laced blood went to work with hungry zeal. Her grunt twisted to a shriek as she dropped her sword and began to claw at her face. The skin was drawn tight now, growing redder as the blood sizzled beneath the purple flesh. Her metal fingers raked wildly, drawing out great gouts as she sought to rip the poison out from under her flesh.
The long-faced creature collapsed to her knees and he saw his opportunity.