As Taureg hit the ground with an audible thud, kicking up a small cloud of dust, Sydir felt a giddy sense of anticipation wash over him. While his muscles burned, his chest rose and fell with ragged, shallow breaths. The Dhani’s eyes seemed to crackle with green electricity as he advanced towards his prone opponent. That sense of giddiness, he knew it to be the sense of impending victory, washed away the ache from his mind. The thrill of the kill was all that mattered, and it was close at hand now. Sydir could smell it. Feel it. Taste it in the very air. For a brief, fleeting window of time, Sydir was no longer on the sands of the Pit, but back in the jungles of his native Falyndar, with weak and injured prey before him.
The Dhani crouched down, coiling his powerful legs to spring into the air, a seemingly impossible feat for such a large man. But then, Sydir was no man. His jump may have been meager by human standards, the Dhani still wasn’t completely comfortable using his legs after nearly a century without, but it was enough for him to stretch his right elbow forward before gravity took over. The force of impact on his ribs and legs as he fell made Sydir wince slightly, not quite winding him this time. Taureg, however, took Sydir’s falling elbow to the torso, and the Dhani took satisfaction at the sound of ribs cracking and giving way beneath. Taureg, for his part, let out a bloodcurdling scream of pain. ”Impressive lungs for a boy that just had a Dhani fall on his chest,” Sydir thought before he reached his left hand up to grab the young human by the throat.
Wrapping his digits around Taureg’s neck, Sydir began to squeeze. The human clutched at Sydir’s wrist with both hands, desperately scrabbling for even the smallest of gaps that might allow him some small reprieve. Using his right arm to lever his body back up while keeping his left grip firm, Sydir locked eyes with his opponent’s own ruddy brown orbs, a manic grin splitting his face nearly in half. For the first time since this thrice-damned collar had been snapped around his neck nearly a year ago, Sydir felt truly alive. As if realizing that he was soon to be summarily deprived of that privilege, Taureg began to thrash his entire body, kicking against the ground and writhing his torso, anything to dislodge the serpent that now straddled him. Over the last century, Sydir had not made a habit of losing his grip.
Instead, he delivered first one, then another sharp blows to the young human’s face with his free hand. Each crack of bone-on-bone sent separate sprays of claret into the air, some of it speckling Sydir’s face and chest in warm scarlet. Taureg’s hands dropped away, and Sydir placed his right hand firmly over his left, continuing to squeeze and press down on the human’s throat. It was only at the last moment that he saw the glint of steel flashing in the sand. Inadvertently, his throw had put Taureg back within reach of his dagger, and the human rewarded Sydir’s carelessness with a slash at the Dhani’s own throat. For his part, Sydir managed to tuck his chin to protect his throat, taking a deep cut on his left cheek. As the cold blood splashed to the ground, Sydir clutched at the wound, a howl of mixed rage and pain issuing from his lungs.
That made three times he had underestimated this human. Three times a filthy monkey, not even a proper warrior, had managed to wound the mighty Dhani. This was unacceptable. With Sydir still astride his torso, all two-hundred and fifty pounds of him, Taureg had little recourse but to follow up with a back-handed slash, this one angled to rake across the flesh of Sydir’s collarbone. Unfortunately for the human, his lack of options made him predictable. The Dhani constrictor caught the human’s wrist in his right hand, stopping the attack cold, and returning control of the fight to its proper owner. Sydir applied continuous pulling pressure on the human’s wrist, forcing Taureg’s right arm to over extend. Bracing his left hand onto the human’s elbow, Sydir pushed with his left just as he pulled with his right, and was rewarded with a clear snap, and the sight of ivory bone protruding from pale human flesh. |
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