dagger across the werewolf’s snout.
“Back woman!” he commanded. “Get back!”
The werewolf turned and ran, yet Lord Despaard was now separated from the group. Coming from both sides two creatures jumped forward, each feinting and ducking while the woman Despaard had rescued darted back to the group.
Then from behind her now, the spirit woman gave a great moan, the sound like a huge iron door being opened. Pia heard an animal scream, and she saw how even the werewolves who were closing in on Lord Despaard turned and backed away.
An immense shadow, twice the height of a man, materialised before the spirit woman. It held an object of some sort, though she couldn’t see what it was. Jack was on his knees, breathing hard, sweat upon his brow, looking up at the thing that had appeared.
The shape took a single step forward, the equivalent of three large strides for a tall man. Its back was hunched over, and from its massive shoulders two lines of pale bony spikes ran parallel to its spine. As it moved, the moan sounded again, and as Pia examined it more closely she gasped in amazement.
A gesture from the oracle spurred it into action. It swung its immense torso and Pia saw that it held a huge black double-headed axe. Seeing its face for the first time, she could only think of a bull. The thing took a step to Lord Despaard’s side.
The torso swung back now, and the werewolf gave a squeal that was cut short as there was a sound like a butcher’s blade hacking through a thick joint.
“What a contraption!” Pia recognised the gnome’s high-pitched voice from behind.
Then the spirit woman turned and looked with sightless eyes at the remaining four werewolves who had gathered nearby. They gibbered with panic in their own language.
“Let us pass or you will be destroyed,” the woman cried, pointing to them with a gnarled finger, as if she could see.
“Death does not compare to undeath, for that is what Malak will do,” one of the werewolves shouted back.
The iron minotaur ducked its head and drove a deep furrow into the moist earth with a single scrape of its foot. Pia couldn’t be sure, but she imagined that she saw its nostrils flare.
Then it charged.
Its speed must have caught the werewolves off guard, for only two managed to jump aside. Of the remaining two, the first was lifted into the air upon its huge horns, while the second had its skull smashed in a singe deadly jab from the end of its axe haft.
Someone cheered.
But the two that had jumped aside ran forward, passing the giant, making for the spirit woman.
“Move!” Pia shouted to the old woman. But she paid her no heed.
“Remember, Jack,” she said clearly. “Remember what I told you.”
The werewolf’s jaws closed around her throat, dragging her down. The second ran in, its arm flailing out to rake the boy’s face, missing his throat and running across his jawline before it, too, fell upon the spirit woman.
Jack fell to the ground, and Pia began to bolt in his direction, but Despaard stopped her.
“Get behind me,” he said as he pulled her back.
Pia glanced back to the Minotaur, but it had vanished, leaving two werewolf bodies motionless on the ground.
Jack was pushed to her side by Karnac. The leader of Hope Rock then gestured to the west.
“Go! Run-the river cannot be far now.” He turned to the rest. “We can do it. All of us can.”
The two werewolves abandoned the body of the spirit woman and moved to cut the group off. As they did a ball of orange flame hit one in the back, forcing it to its knees. It screamed as its flesh burned, yet even as it tried to stand Pia saw Kara run forward, her green blade skewering it in one thrust, the tip stabbing down into the soft earth beneath.
Silence fell, and Pia’s heart raced. Then realisation struck her.
Castimir ran beside Kara, with Sir Theodore and Doric watching their backs. The knight ran awkwardly, grimacing each time his right foot bore his weight. In the centre came Arisha, her short bow drawn.
Only one werewolf remained to confront them now.
“Stand aside or be slain,” Karnac commanded.
“I cannot. I dare not. Malak will take far more than my life from me if I do.”
The werewolf charged in with a screaming howl. Arisha loosed her arrow which stuck in the creature’s shoulder, but it barely slowed. Kara was running forward, too, and Lord Despaard, with his two-pronged dagger held before him. A searing jet of flame overtook them, passing them to intercept the desperate werewolf, the flames driving it back.
It thrashed upon the ground in agony as Pia smelled the burning flesh.
“Kill me,” the werewolf moaned. “Kill me, or Malak will do far worse…”
Pia watched as Kara-Meir stepped to the werewolf’s side.
“Do it! Do it or may the gods curse you!”
Pia blinked, and in that second Kara’s sword thrust down, entering the werewolf’s chest. She saw the black blood pour onto the ground beneath its corpse as the blade was withdrawn.
There was no triumph on the woman’s face. Nor regret.
Pia shivered.
“On now! We are so close,” Karnac yelled out. As if to remind them, a great chorus of howls erupted from the east.
“Run! Run, for we have little time!” Sir Theodore shouted, racing forward with his right foot dragging.
Pia found Jack. He was conscious, though clearly in pain. She took his hand in hers, and with a last look at the body of the old woman, she ran.
37
Theodore stumbled on, ignoring the fire in his right foot.
Ahead, he could hear the first of Karnac’s people as they made the jump from the bank into the river. Voices were shouting and screaming, a woman was crying. He heard the crack of branches and the shake of foliage as the desperate people fought their way to the water.
“What I would give now for longer legs,” Doric grumbled at his side. They had reached Kara now. Beside her stood Castimir, a set of runes clutched in each hand as he stared back the way they had come. At the bank’s edge waited Arisha, her bow ready.
“They can’t swim,” Despaard shouted up. “Gather some logs and branches from the bank, anything to help them.”
Quickly, those few who hadn’t dared enter the water did as he suggested, tearing at even the most meagre vegetation in their haste.
“We’re going to make it,” Castimir said with a quick look over his shoulder. Already, Karnac was halfway across the Salve, over thirty yards away. Guided in his arm, lying on her back, was the pregnant woman.
“We should go,” Doric whispered. “But I will need help. I can’t swim either.”