Three men sidled from the alley, weapons glinting in their hands. One carried a spear, a normally rare sight in the more concealed society of Sunberth murderers, but an unwelcome sight all the same. Daggers and an axe graced the other two and they watched the two guards with dark eyes, obscured by the heavy cloth they wore to ward the cold. Fafnur sighed, pulling his sword out and stepping forward, his blade poised and ready.
"Cold night," he said to them, "Too cold to fight...nothin worth carrying here."
"Our intel suggests differently," The man with the spear answered, leveling it at Fafnur, "I don't suppose you'd just be willing to step aside?"
"A man is bought with coin," Fafnur said, "Coin I need for bread. Are you paying me to step aside?"
"Paying with your life."
"Ah," Fafnur answered, smiling, "That is something you do not own."
"What are you after?" Shroud asked, ignoring the pointed glare from Fafnur, "What's worth bleeding over?"
The other men looked to each other for a moment, the one with the spear pulling his scarf tighter around his face, "Dead men don't speak, might as well tell you." He held the spear out at the door. "Word has it there're minted mizas inside, heading to port tomorrow. We want them."
Fafnur shook his head, holding the sword out over the door, "A man lives his life for a code. That code is paid in gold. What does a man care for what lies beyond this door? A man is told to guard it. A man obeys."
"Cryptic petcher," the spearman snarled, "Gut em all."
Fafnur hissed through his nose, taking three steps forward before the word 'Gut' ever left his opponent's mouth. The leader had turned his gaze to the other men, urging them on with a crook of his neck.
Fafnur took that as a weakness, swinging his blade up to carve a red grin in the thick meat of his connective tissue. Gurgling, the spearman went down, grasping at his neck and gurgling his life blood.
But the guard had not paused to watch his opponent, had only continued to move toward the one with the axe, a fellow already bringing up up to accept the gift of steel biting at his body. Shroud hissed to himself, dashing in Fafnur's wake, his blade out in his hand. He drew the second blade as well, complimenting his first as he drove into the thick of it, facing off with the other ruffian.
This man had daggers, much the same as him, and attacked swiftly, pitching forward on one foot and extending his body out almost perpendicularly, thrusting the blade at Shroud. Twisting back from the stab, Shroud spun his blade out and caught the other, deftly moving it along a different trajectory before tilting in himself, slashing with both. His style was unwieldy, too much to think about hand to hand. The slices only cut cloth and his opponent moved sideways to intercept, piercing outward with his blade in a wide arc.
Shroud hissed and threw himself out of reach, rolling across the cold stone in a tangle of cloth and skin.
He came up on his knees, his opponent charging him. Catching the man in the eyes, Shroud channeled Djed through his gaze and into his opponent's skull. Pure and unrelenting terror, fueled this particular hypnotic push, freezing his opponent in mid stride as he whirled back on the defensive.
Fafnur clashed his blade against the axe again, driving his opponent back. Wrenmae followed with his own attack, forcing his opponent back amid whirling blades.
Daggers were not made to be beaten against each other, theirs was a dance more akin to driving and slashing rather than parrying. Back against the wall, Wrenmae's opponent hurled a blade at him, the dagger missing its mark by inches and whirling off into the night. His opponent pressed the advantage, striking with both of his own blades while his opponent was denied escape.
Up, slash, parry, thrust.
And in between a wide horizontal slash and Shroud's daggered answer, metal kissed flesh and slid through bone.
His opponent dropped to the ground, leaving a bloody swath behind him.
Fafnur brought his sword up and across, catching the axe and knocking it from his opponent's grasp, tickling his throat with the blade tip. "A man can show mercy if another accepts," He said quietly, "Clean up your friends and begone."
Nodding, moving slowly, the man retrieved his axe and put it to his belt, spending the next several minutes dragging his dead companions into the alley...likely to pilfer their belongings.
Fafnur returned to the door, sheathing his blade after wiping it down. Shroud did the same, nodding at his companion with grudging respect. The petcher was mad, confusing almost certainly. But he had honor and that was worth respecting.
In the morning they'd find payment for their services and Fafnur spoke no more when the gold had been paid. Their alliance had been the product of gold and convenience, nothing more.
Shroud could live with that. |