by Kuvarakh on December 12th, 2012, 4:27 am
Kuvarakh saw Sinoa sailing towards him through the ghost's vision. Exhaustion was claiming them both now, but he knew the ghost would have enough time and energy to slash a horrific trench through his torso. It would be unlikely to kill him, but it would greatly weaken him and reduce the amount of effort he would be able to make in this body from then on. Also, it would accelerate the rate of the body's decay. Not to mention, it would hurt.
But it would hurt the ghost as well. Of course, once it abandoned the body, that would no longer be the case. So it was reasonable to conclude that once it made a gory mess out of Kuvarakh's body, it would go on its merry way. That did little to lift Kuvarakh's spirits. But it DID keep his buried mind focused on opportunities. And Sinoa's airborne approach was one such.
Having carried a different Pycon, named Saige, around town before, he knew how stout they were. As the ghost turned to respond to the wriggling clay missile, Kuvarakh could sense his intent to catch the flute. Kuvarakh let his slight hold on the muscles of his shoulders flow with the ghost's movement. At the last second he jerked the arm to deflect Sinoa right at his face. The ghost instinctively whipped the other arm in a wide parry, sending Sinoa into a nearby tree, but also knocking the knife free from his grip.
The ghost roared in anger and went to prop its weight up on the low stone rail around the fountain as a prelude to retrieving the knife. Again, Kuvarakh tweaked his arm, to let the support slip. The conflicted body flopped back into the water, its head pounding the stone as it went.
This was both good and bad. On the one hand, the ghost's head slammed against the stone, dazing him. On the other, Kuvarakh's head slammed against the stone, dazing him.