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Revenge Of The Elf (Book 1) Page 17
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âCome on, then, you pit-eyed motherfuckers,â she grimaced. Her heart pounded heavily in her throat. Fulci’s Last Joke caught a stray splinter of moonlight and glittered eagerly. âLet’s see who’s the real nasty around here.â
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
The Lichspawn opened their mouths as one, thick black drool dripping, and surged forward like a school of sharks toward wounded prey. Their claws clicked and clacked as they charged and their howl filled her head with the sound of a hundred tormented souls burning with insatiable need.
There were too many of them.
She couldn’t hope to kill more than one or two before they overwhelmed her. Before they dragged her down and tore her apart.
But she was blind to this. Blind to the shattered odds and the absolute certainty she was looking her own death in the face. Even though the Shadowed Halls loomed in the darkness of their eyes and all she could see was the blindfold of hate drawn over her sight.
The Bloody Nine were here.
In Spikewrist.
If they weren’t dead, then they drew breath. And she wanted to ensure they drew no more.
So, legs splayed and arms akimbo, the elf stood her ground and felt disconnected from her fear of the Lichspawn. Her fists tightened around her knives and her mouth drew back in a determined grimace.
Her eyes flicked over them, picking at their inhuman features illuminated in the sharp edges of light spilling from the surprised windows of the nearby inn.
Stealing a quick breath, the elf charged.
The guilt of Talek’s fate which gnawed at her heart now exploded into fiery rage and the roar torn from her throat rose high above the howling Lichspawn. A Flaw in the Glass erupted into life, the green venomous glow lashing out from the blade and encircling her wrist.
The first Lichspawn within her reach died with its neck almost completely severed by the enchanted blade. Black blood sprayed over her arms, but she was oblivious to the sickly wetness.
The second let out a muted howl as her boot caught it between the legs. Too low to crush its balls as she’d hoped, but high enough to make it double over and expose its back to the ravenous blade which took the opportunity and sheared through ribs as it dove into the creature’s blackened heart.
Nysta ripped A Flaw in the Glass free with a satisfied grunt. Spun into a third, Fulci’s Last Joke driving hard into abdomen and tearing upward. She managed to keep grip on the slippery handle and wrenched it free amid flowers of gore.
Choked back a scream as claws raked across her back. Speckled red snow beneath her feet told of fresh cuts.
Reacting without thinking, the elf wheeled and put all her power into a kick which sent her attacker flying into the charging path of a fresh wave of pale-skinned creatures.
They tumbled in an ungainly heap.
Still unaware of the futility of fighting their seemingly endless numbers, the elf struck hard and fast. Moving with unfathomable grace, she seemed to dance among them, their grasping hands unable to find her.
But not once did her grace appear nimble. There was too much power in her attacks. She chopped as though wielding axes, leaving a grotesque trail of dismembered bodyparts.
She moved with glittering-eyed brutality. And a vacant coldness that would have frozen them in fear if only they could feel such an emotion.
As it was, it wasn’t until she pounced onto the back of one creature that she realised they weren’t charging her.
They were fleeing.
A Flaw in the Glass bit hard into the back of the Lichspawn’s scrawny neck. She tore the glowing blade free as black blood fountained from the wound. Screamed; âTalek! For Talek, you cursed motherfuckers!â
Stabbed the corpse again.
And again.
Tasted foul blood on her lips.
Her thoughts were a fragmented mess. The horror of battle blended too easily with the thrill of fighting and left her feeling like a hurricane was blowing around her chest and making her brain spin inside her skull.
Overwhelmed by her emotions, she forced herself to stop. To allow her shoulders to loosen.
But the grip on her blade didn’t ease for even a second.
Wrenched her tear-stained face toward the retreating creatures and quivered to her feet as she caught sight of the black figure gliding through the chaotic scramble of bodies. Hooded and with a heavily-notched sword held low in its massive fist, the figure paused at their edge and eyed the grim remains strewn behind her.
âImpressive,â he said. His voice was so smooth her stomach turned at the sound. âYou fight well, Child of Veil. Truly, you are everything she promised.â
The elf’s frown deepened and she wiped her blood-spattered face with the back of her wrist. Her gaze took in the tight ring of Lichspawn. Their empty eyes studied her in the same way a wyrm might study a bug.
With disinterest.
Nonetheless, she felt frozen in place as their numbers increased. She directed her gaze toward the hooded man. âWhere are they?â
âThey?â
âRaste. And his Nine motherfuckers of soon-to-be-fucking-dead. They came in here. I saw their tracks.â
The figure cocked its head and seemed to listen intently to something she couldn’t hear. Nodded. âAh. Yes, the riders. Is that why you entered the gates? To chase these men?â
âI sure as fuck didn’t come here for the beer,â she growled.
âThen you won’t have long to wait. My friends will bring them this way for you.â
âWhy would you do that?â
âBecause it amuses me. And it’s been a long time since I was amused.â He took another step forward, the sword almost forgotten in his hand. Yet, there was something in the way he held it which said if he remembered it, he could kill her with it.
That all her training would mean nothing.
Because despite the seeming ease with which she’d fended off the Lichspawn, she had no doubt this one was different. Could sense it.
A trickle of sweat slid down her brow and hovered on the edge of her vision. She didn’t move. Her voice, when it came, was a dry rasp. âWhat do you want?â
The Lichspawn snapped their heads toward her as one and their voice froze the air. âThe Darkness will fight again.â
The figure watched her take a step backward and looked to be smiling under his hood. âAs my friends say,â he waved an arm toward them. âThe Darkness must fight.â
She licked her lips. Wondered where the spellslinger had gotten to. Maybe he’d run off. She couldn’t blame him for that. âFuck it, then,â she spat, shifting into a crouch. âLet’s fight.â
âThey come,â the figure said, unmoved by her stance.
And hooves thundered as nine horsemen burst into the street from a narrow alley. Their horses screamed as they wheeled to a halt between the dark figure and the elf, their path blocked in every direction.
âRaste,â she hissed. âYou red-haired cocksucker! I should’ve killed you years ago!â
âYou!â his eyes widened in shock. He took in her appearance and shook his head.
âA raghead,â Fenis choked out. âShe’s a fucking raghead!â
âShit, Raste,â Neckless scowled. âYou said they wouldn’t send anyone.â
Raste worked his jaw before gasping through his disbelief; âNysta? No way. No fucking way. They’d never take you! Never!â
âThat’s her?â Fenis paled. âThat’s the bitch he was talking about? You said she was just a whore!â
âIt’s a trick, I tell you,â Raste tugged hard on his restless mount. âA fucking trick!â
âThese demons. They with you, raghead?â Tubal asked, his gaze skipping over the Lichspawn. âYou make a pact with devils?â
She shook her head. âThey ain’t with me. But I’ll kill them too, if I
have to. Just want you fellers. You owe me me your painful screaming deaths. Wouldn’t want you to be in debt to me too long. So I aim to make you pay up. Right now.â
âRaste?â Doket struggled with his horse, the fear in his voice making it shrill. âWhat do we do?â
âWe can’t fight all of them,â Torak kept his eyes on the ring of Lichspawn. His sword glittered darkly. âGrim’s asshole, there’s got to be hundreds of the bastards.â
Nysta was the first to move.
Determined, she walked toward the Bloody Nine, back rigid and head high. A Flaw in the Glass hummed in her hand. She’d known she’d catch them eventually, but in truth she’d not expected to find them so soon.
Revenge was so close she felt she would burst.
It seemed too good to be true.
A thin cord strummed down her spine, chilling her to the core. There were nine of them. And a hundred Lichspawn. There was no hope.
She was going to fail.
The fear flooded her mind before shrieks of defiance melted it in waves which carried Talek’s soft eyes. Staring at her.
Filling her with strength.
âFor you, Talek,â she breathed. âI kill for you.â
And every step was easier than the last as she walked into the mouth of what she figured was her certain death.
âShe’s coming!â Doket shrieked. âRaste!â
âShut the fuck up!â the red-haired elf lashed out with his sword. The flat of the blade slapped against the young elf’s chest. Doket gave a cry and cringed back in his saddle. Raste’s eyes hadn’t left hers. âNysta! Look around. You’re trapped in here with us. These demons won’t let you go either.â
âDon’t care,â she said. âJust want you dead, Raste. Don’t much give a shit if I live or die after that. You already killed the one thing I lived for, remember?â
Tubal looked eager to fight and rose in his saddle. âOnly one of her, Raste. Reckon I can take her.â
âDon’t be a fuckhead,â Raste scowled. âThey’ll be on us like flies on shit when she’s dead.â
The Twins looked unconcerned. âWhat’s stopping them now? Maybe they’re not interested in us?â
âYou are nothing to us,â the hooded figure confirmed easily.
âIt’s her they want,â Doket blurted. Hope made him grin madly. âLook at them! They’re not even looking at us!â
Nysta paused in her stride and saw it was true. The eyes of every Lichspawn tracked her with an eeriness that made her skin crawl. But she felt no malice in their attention.
Only a cold sense of expectation.
She chewed her lip thoughtfully. The hooded man’s stance was easy. Almost casual. He gave the impression they wouldn’t stop her achieving her goal. Why, she couldn’t say, but whatever his reasons were, she figured he’d keep the creatures off her back for the time it would take to kill Raste.
At least, it’s what her gut told her.
She watched the red-hared elf as he studied the ring of black-eyed beings. Slowly, his expression eased, but there was still enough wariness in his mind to keep him looking cautious.
âCould be,â he said at last. âWhat do you reckon, Nysta? They after you?â
She took another step toward him.
No one else moved.
She took another.
âStop,â Raste said. âStay where you are, Nysta. Listen to me. Just for a fucking second, listen. Looks to me these demons are after you, not us. Looks like we’re in a position to help you. If it’s worth our while. Or we could just ride right past you and out the gate. Leave you here. Fact, that’s what I’m thinking we should do. I’ll wager these bastards couldn’t stop our horses. They couldn’t pull us off back there, so I don’t reckon they’ll pull us off here. We got mounts trained to go through armies bigger than this. And better equipped. So, we know we can ride right over them. Wouldn’t stop us for a second. Only thing that stops me from leaving you here right now is we didn’t want to kill Talek. Didn’t mean to. Want you to know that.â
âLiar,â she bared her teeth and felt the handles of her blades dig into the palms of her hands.
âBelieve what you like,â the red-haired elf said with a shrug. âI told you what I wanted to. So, now what? Maybe you can kill one of us on our way past. Maybe two, if you’re good. Which I don’t reckon you are. But the rest of us will be out that gate like a shot and you’ll be stuck here as demon food. Think about it. Use that fucking brain and think for once in your pathetic life. We can make a deal.â
âIf I might interrupt?â the dark figure sounded amused. âI said you were nothing to us. Not that my friends wouldn’t kill you. You will die here, Children of Veil. All of you. My friends will tear you apart. They hunger. You will feed them.â
âShit!â Doket’s eyes nearly burst from their sockets. His horse jostled against Raste’s, unsettled by the Lichspawn and its rider’s fear. âRaste!â
âLet’s get the fuck out of here,â Torak hefted his sword. Panic made his voice shrill. âCome on, Raste. We’ll run right over them. It’ll be just like the Gates of Anders Hove!â
âAin’t no full moon tonight,â Nysta waved A Flaw in the Glass at the Lichspawn. âReckon these subspecies won’t be as much of a pushover.â
Raste’s eyes were pinned by hers. âPlease, Nysta. This ain’t the place. Or the time.â
âYou’re wrong, Raste,â she rolled her shoulders and prepared to make her move. âThis is the place. And the time.â
âThen die, you fucking whore! Die like the alley slut you are.â He kicked his heels viciously into the horse’s ribs. âBloody Nine! We ride!â
âWe ride!â they chorused as one.
The hooded figure made a small motion with his sword and the Lichspawn swarmed the riders like an army of ants. Their claws clicked and clacked. Their mouths drew back into savage snarls.
Eyes blacker than the darkest corners of the Shadowed Halls, the Lichspawn sought the comfort of fresh meat.
âThey’re coming!â Doket screamed.
As he was closest, Torak screamed too as Fulci’s Last Joke spun neatly through the air and plunged into his left eye.
The angle had been difficult.
Made more difficult by his sudden attempt to ride his horse toward the gates so the blade punched into his eye and glanced outward, the point smashing out through the side of his skull rather than spitting into his brain as she’d hoped.
Flecks of bone mingled unseen with his blood on the ground.
One of the Twins wrestled with Torak’s horse to bring it under control.
The other sent a wrathful glance at her.
But she’d already moved and was desperately trying to squeeze through the narrowing spaces between swarming Lichspawn, brutally cutting down those unfortunate enough to jostle in front of her.
Tubal, eager at first to charge her, found himself struggling to keep a wave of Lichspawn from overwhelming his horse. His massive axe responded in glittering arcs.
Heads rolled in near-comical excess with each sweeping strike and blood sprayed thickly to the street. He wore a manic expression, his gaze constantly seeking her out and his mouth moved constantly as curses spilled over his mouth like a swarm of bees.
Snorting, his horse struck out with its forelegs, obeying instincts weathered by years of training and experience in battle.
Her gaze nailed to Raste, Nysta stabbed through a surge of Lichspawn who appeared to ignore her presence. Bamboo Bones left her hand like a steel wasp. Aimed at Raste’s torso, the blade sheared through air in search of the red-haired elf’s blood.
Triumph scorched her heart as the blade left her fingers. She felt its accuracy to be true, and could almost taste the sodden impact as it burrowed home.
But
Fenis, forced to kick his heels hard into his mount to avoid being cornered, was sent lurching through the raking claws of a dozen Lichspawn. He swung a heavy mace, tearing the face clean off one creature even as his horse bounded forward. The young elf barely registered the glittering steel as he crossed its path.
The small blade should have skimmed off the dwarfen mail he wore loosely under his vest, but the angle of his arm as he eagerly raised the mace for another shot at a snapping head exposed his armpit and it was there Bamboo Bones buried itself.
He choked a cry and doubled over in his saddle, clutching the gushing wound.
Nysta bit a curse at missing her target and leapt up the back of one of the Lichspawn, using it as a springboard to launch herself into the air at Raste’s horse.
He lashed out with his sword, hate burning in his eyes.
The sword chewed into the light wyrmskin of her jacket. The cut was shallow, but even were it mortal, she still wouldn’t have changed her attack. As it was, she didn’t feel it.
She snatched at his shirt, trying to drag him off the horse.
Tried to slash him with A Flaw in the Glass.
Missed.
He reared high in the saddle with a snarl. His elbow smashed into her cheek and he raised his sword. With no room to swing the blade, he used the pommel and pain exploded across her shoulder.
Suddenly desperate, pounded at her again and again, his free hand shoving her in the face. âGet the fuck off me, you fucking whore!â
Wearing the blows, the elf swung her hips, trying to lift one leg high enough to jam her foot between his ankle and stirrup. What she wanted was enough leverage to make an effective attack.
Her boot scraped against the horse’s ribs.
She felt another impact, this time glancing off bone. Wincing, she realised she couldn’t hold much longer and made one last attempt to stab him.
The blade lunged at his guts.
Might have cut him open, too.
But from behind, Neckless aimed a kick at her head which connected hard and sent her lunge veering past his belly and striking air. The shock of impact made her arch her back in pain. The fingers holding his shirt slipped.