The shouted word had the Akalaks jerk their heads up, ears pricking, but before they could react a half-dozen arrows whipped through the breeze and among them. Two of them speared through the neck of Wessel's horse, making it shriek with agony and its froth turn to vomited blood as it crashed downwards. Two more missed entirely, another caught an Akalak in the shoulder-
Razkar's slammed into the chest of the horse he aimed at, and it reared up in pain, it's rider barely keeping hold-
As a fresh volley was unleashed upon them.
Wessel squealed as he tumbled onto the cold, hard ground, feeling something break but the shock was numbing him. He was a merchant, a money-lender, with soft, perfumed hands and for the gods' sake, this is what he had bodyguards for! And now he saw one of the Akalaks take two arrows square in the chest, chainmail no protection at this range, arrows piercing his heart and lung and sending him toppling from his horse.
Another blue-skinned warrior opened his mouth to bellow a warcry and an arrow caught him in the throat. The cry became a gurgle of blood and he was dead before he hit the mud.
"PROTECT THE MASTER!"
But the rest were faster, and Razkar could see they were experienced in this breed of chaos. They didn't panic for even a moment. They leapt from their horses and slapped or slashed them with their weapons, driving them forwards towards their attackers. Two of them stayed by their fallen employer, and the other four drew their weapons and charged.
Razkar notched another arrow, took aim... and fired.
He aimed for the stomach but it lodged in a violet-skinned Akalak's arm instead, making his growl in pain but then he just ripped it out in disgust. Razkar dropped the bow, drew his weapons and screamed.
"FOR MYRI!"
The Akalaks saw the dark-skinned warrior break cover, shrieking and yelling with ax and gladius in hand, eager to get close. A final swarm of arrows hurtled towards them. Two slammed into one of the those guarding Wessler, bowling him over as he tried to heave the terrified human back to his feet. Pierced through the gut and lung, he staggered backwards, looking down in disbelief, and when he fell back to the ground, Wessler fell with him.
"Stay down, master!" The other Akalak said urgently, a lakan in each hand as he shielded the human with his own body. "We deal with them!"
"You petching well better!"
Now more humans came charging from the grass, along with... the Akalak bodyguards faces hardened. Two of their own kind, blue-skinned and stone-faced, were with the scum that had ambushed them. Both wielded lakans. There was an unmistakable pause... and then battle was joined.
Race and creed mattered not in battle. Only life and death did.
Razkar ran to one of them, a violet-skinned bruiser a foot taller than him and wielding two lakans. He slashed at his ribs with his hand ax and the wickedly-curved blade jerked down to stop him, other lakan stabbing towards his gut-
-only for the Myrian to swipe horizontally down with his gladius, knock the sword-dagger to the side and lash out with a boot between his legs.
The Akalak grunted in pain but it was quickly overridden by outrage. He doubled over but jerked his head down and forward-
-nailing the smaller savage right across the nose.
Razkar yelped and staggered back, nose broken, blood flowing into his mouth. Pain and stars and blackness flashed across his vision but he stayed on his feet, willing himself to be ready for-
The Akalak slid forwards and swiped from the side with his right, Razkar meeting steel with steel as his gladius caught it, the blue-skinned warrior foot lashing out for his leg-
-and he twisted to his right, narrowly avoiding the kick-
-swinging his hand ax towards the Akalak's stomach with a growl.
The lakan that jerked down to block the ax was just a shade too slow and Razkar slammed the weapon into the bigger man's stomach. The razor-sharp ax head gnawed through chainmail and bit greedily into the muscled flesh beyond. The Akalak gasped in pain, lakans rising again-
-and Razkar ripped his weapon free and jumped back from the swinging blades. The duel was far from over, and though speed was of the essence, he would not die today through overconfidence. Gasping and bent over, the Akalak glared at him with sheer hatred, then readied his twin weapons again and charged.