"Cowards!"
Razkar had no particular plans to die that day, but when the flock suddenly shattered off into a dozen directions, he felt a pang of disappointment flash through him. To loose his final arrow into them, then lay about with gladius until he was biting and clawing them, dragging their souls with his own to his Goddess... that would have been a fine end.
If he were on his feet, of course.
With a snarl he let his notched arrow fly, but it wobbled harmlessly through their rapidly-thinning ranks. The winged monsters were scattered for the horizon, for the setting sun, some stopping to scavenge and cleave what meat they could from the dead horse, and then vanish above the tall grass. But none were staying to fight.
The Myrian leaned forward and his body knocked him back down, not in the mood for any more injuries. He bow fell from his fingers and he lay there panting, adrenaline and rage and joy surging through him in equal measure.
A red-and-purple blotched sunset, the work of a mad god or a genius, looked down upon him as his eyes were turned upwards.
And then something new entered his vision. A vision, in fact. That same woman, bruises on the top of her forehead, white hair spilling over her shoulders, flecked and soaked here and there with scarlet. It must have been his imagination, but her hands and face seemed to glow as she loomed over him, whispering words he could not hear.
Razkar winced at his wounds... as his cuts...
Became no longer cuts.
Goddess...
The bulky human next to her looked down at the prostate Myrian with something a little more guarded, bloody ax still in his hand. The horses were milling around, ranging from dumb servility now the threat was gone to a frothing frustration in the Bloodbane that Razkar knew all too well. He could hear, but...
He could... feel his body... healing. There was no other word for it, and it was a strange experience. His whole life, Razkar had known the myriad forms of pain a body could endure. Cuts, bruises, bumps, slashes, bites, fractures, a dozen others. Now he could feel the cuts and slashes the monsters had carved into him close, the blood oozing from them walled again behind his skin. The wound in his shoulder closed, tingles of agony as the flesh knitted back together over in moments. He could feel the woman's hands moving lower towards his leg, his one remaining injury-
No. No, not yet.
A name. He heard her croak or mutter something that sounded like a name. His dark eyes flickered to hers, and with his teeth gritting so loud the human could hear it six feet above him, the Myrian pulled himself to a sitting position.
"Razkar." He growled, face lathered with sweat and blood in equal measure. "Not... Not yet."
She started to protest but he had already decided on his course. He staggered to his feet (or foot, more accurately), tottering and weaving. His wounds were closed but his thigh still complained, loudly and effectively, denying him full balance. But Razkar would not be held by this, he would not be denied.
And neither would his goddess.
He reached down and plucked his gladius from the ground, hefting it in his hands and giving silent thanks to whatever smith crafted so fine a weapon. But still, that was not enough. There were bodies littering the field, maybe a dozen of them, wings flickering in the breeze, bled out and mutilated by swords, blades, spears, arrows and rampaging horse.
Except one.
Razkar's eyes narrowed and a feral growl escaped his lips, spying one of the winged creatures moaning on the ground. He hoped, he prayed as he got closer, fervently and humbly. He would not stoop so low and to claim another warrior's kill on the battlefield, so...
The Zith looked up as a shadow fell over it. A blood-drenched Myrian grinned down at it, teeth clotted with gore. The man's eyes sparkled as he saw it was missing half its leg, panting and bleeding out. He'd thought this one was already dead, but these "Zith" were... resilient. And good sport. Even now, paling and on the verge of death, it still spat out curses and prayers...
But whatever gods or demons it prayed to, they were not with it today.
"Myri... cast eyes on your son this day..."
Razkar stepped over the Zith lying on its back and crashed down to a kneeling position, gritting his teeth, one knee pinning the thing's right wrist. The other batted upwards feebly, and Razkar reversed his grip on his gladius, bringing it stabbing down-
"Feast though your warrior on this gift I bring..."
-straight through the Zith's other wrist, pinning it to the bloody ground. It screeched again, animal fury now replaced with flat-out terror. It wailed skywards, calling for its kin, but none dared show their faces.
And above it, panting and muttering in his tongue, eyes glazed with holy pleasure, Razkar pulled the short hunting knife from his loincloth.
"Goddess, I bring you victory-"
With deliberate, careful precision, he sliced open the Zith's furry chest just below it's sternum, the thing gagging and choking now in agony. He ignored it, words tumbling louder and louder, so even the two strangers watching in fascinated horror could hear them.
"I bring you souls from glorious battle-"
He dropped the sword... and jammed his hand into the open wound. The Zith screeched in unbearable pain, head thrown back and blood pumping down its stomach. Razkar gritted his teeth, eyes wide and enraptured, and pushed deeper, searching, groping...
For the pulsating thing he closed his hands around.
"Goddess... I bring you blood."
-and with one vicious, brutal tug, he ripped out the thing's heart.
Razkar straightened up, facing the dying sun on the horizon, fading rays still peeking out from above the grass, as if brave enough to bear witness. But the smiling Razkar knew better: he knew his Goddess would not desert him until she had been sated.
He held the still-beating heart over his head in both hands, forearms completely red, arterial blood dripping onto his face as he closed his eyes in ecstasy.
"I, Razkar of the Shorn Skulls... fulfill my vow... and pledge myself... anew."
The fading light glinted off the organ, and with his words said and offering made, Razkar lowered the heard to his face... licked his lips... and took a bite out of it. The taste nearly overwhelmed him. Not the thick, rich flavor of Myrian, nor the watery inconsistency of Charoda. No, this is... smooth... gamey, perhaps, but with a softness that reminded him more of well-cooked Dhani.
Razkar's eyes rolled into the back of his head. The gnosis at the back of his neck burned, or seemed to. This was what he needed. This was where his destiny lay.
This was what he was born to be.
He finished the heart, and still chewing, snatched up the hunting knife and scored a thick cut onto the thing's head, from ear to ear just below the hairline. He gripped the hair at the back in a tight bunch, and pulled-
The bloody scalp came away with a ripping sound, and Razkar grinned even wider.
Plenty more to go...
Still smiling, Razkar got to his feet, eyes flashing around like a cat's for fresh corpses, the others he had butchered. He counted another six, and-
-that's when his knee finally gave up the ghost and he came crashing down.
He looked up at the two agog bystanders, and if a blood-splattered beserker can look sheepish, then Razkar certainly gave it a good try.
"OK..." he said, clearing his throat so they could hear him, "Now might need heal."