The worm flinched and writhed for its wounds; it felt them, painful and raw, but it was forced to pull its simple mind on only one source of them. The thrown debris was nothing compared to the flying blades, and those also seemed negligible in the face of the man who dug deep into its flesh with lakan and scimitar. It bent toward Alderache, but its giant bones would not grant the flexibility to grab hold of the pest. Uphis saw its distraction and took advantage of it. His own daggers, infinitely sharp, rang on the air as they joined the others in flight toward the worm. Each of them hit, slicing hot red gashes into its fleshy gums. “You will die, this day!” Uphis thundered, furious, all but ignoring his followers’ words and gestures in favor of the battle’s glory. He observed them well, and noted the valor of the souls that stood around Him, but he would not stand for pause. It screamed, and the shrieking, scraping, wailing noise seemed to pierce through stone and flesh alike, filling the world with its agony. It shuddered and convulsed wildly, and only stilled when the akalak was thrown. Luckily, he had not climbed high enough to take any incredible damage from the fall. Like the stone of Nyka from which its hard flesh seemed to be borne, it persisted. There was a whole body beneath the surface, anchoring it, fueling it. And while its apparent weak point glistened red between gnashing rows of teeth, could that be the only one? With its secluded opponent dispatched, it turned instantly to the creatures before it. Maybe it was more selfish than Malavos realized, and more like to destroy those creatures that would harm it than those that seemed easier prey. Its attention settled on the Alvina and Kassan beside Him, the souls who were shouting their rage. The other monks seemed to notice its preference and began to cry out as well, but it did not seemed moved by their noise, without ears. Still it saw them, or some of them, somehow. Perhaps it sensed them like an aurist could, or perhaps it smelled them with some unseen receptor. How did it see? How did it perceive the world, and choose who deserved its wrath? Was it sheer instinct? Or did this creature, risen up from the womb of the Mother City, have some other, terrible motivation? |