Victor could not have anticipated how the weight of his own strike would slow him against the zith’s reflexes. As soon as he thought he saw the opening, it was gone again, and great furred arms were bearing down on him. Suddenly his own arms were bent and his desperate grip on the sword was loosed by shock and chaos. He whirled, saw only that familiar blur of blue, and reeled backward. The moment he found his fingers empty, his hands flew to the second weapon at his side. Hastily recovering from his compromised balance with a few long strides, he brandished the dagger blindly in front of him.
But Laute advanced just as quickly as Victor could retreat. He saw those terrible claws reaching for him and he knew he could not escape them. His arm and the blade at its end swept sloppily across the small of his opponent’s chest, hoping to carve a shallow line across his diaphragm and buy time for an idea to come. Then he suddenly shifted against the slippery sand and lurched forward, pulling his weight into a stab at Laute’s abdomen.
Victor would not have hesitated to dig the thing into the monster’s gut and leave it there, but he really only intended to force a dodge, so that he could reciprocate. He turned his body sharply so that he faced his opponent for a mere moment; then he rounded behind it, stepping lightly in a circle of a dance before he skirted away on tripping toes.
Only then did he remember to smile. “Stupid animal,” he mumbled with a chuckle, loud enough for the silent beast to hear. He knew he would have barely a moment before the zith turned to face him again, so he took that opportunity to locate Ulric’s fallen sword. His brief search also told him of a skirmish in the stands, a crater in the crowd with his teammate at its center, a thick smear of sun-polished blood opposite a moon-white face. He could not discern any expressions from his distance, but still he peered curiously at it as he heaved the sword from the sand. Clinging to the sword with both hands and dragging it through the air on his left side, a short sprint pulled him near the commotion, where he glimpsed three faces: smug, sick, and scarlet.
“Seven—” was all that he could manage before he remembered that he could not investigate too thoroughly; his focused face forgot to show concern or confusion as he ricocheted from the hard stone of the stands’ base and darted into the air, towards the arena again. Assuming he had been pursued, Victor flew at Laute and aimed again for his outstretched wing, this time choosing a piece of it that hung further than his claws could reach. As gravity pulled him downward, so he pushed his weapon. Whether or not it met its target, Victor would bury the blade deep in the red sand and the compacted dirt beneath. If it did, the animal would be pinned by that thick film of flesh until it ripped itself away or tugged the sword from the earth.
Victor’s fingertips swiped the gritty ground as he tried to recover from the fall without relinquishing his momentum to a break fall. If his dagger had not been confiscated by Laute’s gut, it was left somewhere beyond his reach. Unarmed, he stepped around in his old familiar arc, forcing himself to watch his opponent instead of the spectators, hoping he might hear it roar. There were different means to offend a beast than words... he just had to figure out what they were.