Malah jumped back in a loose fighting stance while Kanara, from her crouching position, rolled out of the ray’s path. She paused, frozen for a moment. She could feel the ray beneath them, but how could she have not seen it so close to them? She already knew the answer; she just wasn’t ready to accept it. Malah’s words reached her ears, quickly disturbing her thoughts. Kanara let her breath hiss through her teeth, her eyes narrowing. This was not a time for self-pity. “Failure is not an option.” She retorted back at Malah, shaking her head. “We’re going to have to kill it or distract it well enough to run.” The ray took a leap towards Malah, displaying its large stinger glinting against the sun like a deadly needle. The body itself was freckled with various shades of tan reminding her of the golden sand at noon and the dark grains at night. She had never faced them without her people beside her. A thin line of fear and doubt ran down her spine as if immobilizing her. But the ray wasted no time in taking a leap at her. It knew it was outnumbered, but it had the advantage of surprise for the moment. Kanara couldn’t move as the large flat body flew in the air. Time seemed to slow and all she could see was two parallel lines of legs running down the center of its body. There were so many of them, all wiggling back and forth as the ray almost flew towards her. Disgust filled her at the sight of the squirming legs; she could almost feel them trying to crawl up her arms. Shuddering, she dived sideways at the last second landing on her shoulder before leaping back up to her feet and moving backwards, quarterstaff in hand. The ray let out a terrible sound, an inhuman screech that shook her bones and rattled her ears before diving back into the ground. Kanara winced, but managed to keep her sense trained to ray. She cursed herself for not having a blade handy. Her staff wasn’t exactly sharp, but if she put enough strength behind it, it might be enough to pierce its skin. “I have an idea.” She shouted at Malah, cupping her hands around her mouth. The ray had managed to separate them, so that the sand ray lay between them. They were a good five feet away from each other now. But, this also meant they had somewhat surrounded the creature. She prayed another one wouldn’t come join the fight. That would really leave them at a disadvantage. Learning her lesson, she kept alert for any signs of other rays. “We have to kill it before it calls all of its friends.” She wasn’t sure how the girl was going to fight without a weapon, but she knew better than to ask. The Dhani were known to be a threat for a reason. Maybe the girl would turn herself into a snake. Shrugging away the ideas mentally, she took a deep breath and shouted, “I can tell you when it’ll be closest to the surface, but I don’t know how hard its back side is. If that doesn’t work, we’ll have to attack it’s under area it when it jumps in the air.” She paused, feeling the ray beneath her. With haste, she drove her quarterstaff into the group like a pike. Her body shook as she hit something, hard. Cursing, she jumped and ran till she was out of range. She had hit hard bone, which was probably it’s nose. “I missed,” she whispered disbelievingly. She watched as the ray exploded out of the sand from where she had last stood, her quarterstaff flying and landing on the other side of the creature. The ray looked furious; indeed it seemed Kanara had enraged it even more. It dove back under the sand and charged towards Malah. “It’s coming straight at you!” Kanara screamed at the Dhani. Almost tripping over her feet, the Chaktawe sprinted towards her weapon. She wouldn’t be able to help Malah without it. Scooping her quarterstaff, she changed course of the Dhani, the ray ahead of her. “It’s at the surface now! It’ll attack soon!” She yelled. What she wouldn’t predict until the last moment was whether it would jump or attack from right under her as it had tried to do with Kanara. |