Horlamin ignored the frightened horses as he stepped to the front of their caravan, Carsten drawing up beside him. This wasn't Hor's first fight, and as in any skirmish in the past, Hor took the time to observe the situation. Wormwit was currently reloading his crossbow, his first bolt lodged in the thigh of a vagrant. There were about four of them, not counting the already wounded man, all wearing poorly-made clothing. They were nothing more than beggers, with no money to buy food. So they decide to try and rob a caravan with the hope of it having food. Well they picked the wrong caravan to rob.
Hor glanced over at Carsten, who merely pointed with her sword at the men, who had recollected themselves. Even with armed men standing there in their path, they were still stupid enough to attack. Hor nodded, all seriousness, before stepping forward. He did hear footsteps though, Carsten maybe, or the Benshira. It didn't matter who it was; all Hor knew was he wasn't going to fight by himself. And then the fighting began, forcing all the thoughts of the fighter back. Now, all he would do was focus on the fight.
Two of the street rats turned their attention to him, both wielding clubs; they couldn't even afford a decent weapon, yet they have the nerve to attack the caravan. But to these men, those clubs were like great-axes, and they attempted to pummel Hor into submission. Hor held his buckler outward, allowing them to repeatedly strike it. The jolts were uncomfortable, but better on the buckler than his face. One of the men, his right eye covered with an ugly scar, attempted to sidestep his shield to the right. Hor swung outward with the buckler, catching the man in the arm, knocking him back. But that opened his defenses, and the second man, buck teeth visible in his grin, swung for his ribs with a sweeping blow. Hor pivoted backwards, bringing his sword against the club. Stealing a glance at scar face, who was still occupied from his blow, Hor brought the buckler down on buck teeth's forearm. The crack of bones sounded off in the alley, and Hor stepped back to recollect himself.
Good thing too, because scar face was back, swinging his club upward, hoping to catch Hor under his chin. One step back put Hor out of range for the attack, but in the heat of battle, he failed to realize that the wounded vagrant was laying behind him. His feet got tangled up on the man, and he stumbled further backwards, allowing scar face to strike at him. Offbalence, Hor only had time to turn himself away, and the club struck him in the bicep of his shield arm. A howl of pain escaped his lips, but he needed to muster through it. Scar face was wide open from his last attack, and Hor took the advantage. Hor shifted painfully, his bicep throbbing from the blow, but he brought his sword up past Scar Face's extended arms, planting his blade into the man's stomach. His expressing shifted from victorious to dumbstruck, and that was how it froze when death overtook him. Hor pulled free his sword from the begger, who dropped to the ground, and planned his next move.
Plan A was to defend himself from an incoming strike. His buckler shot up, catching the club, with buck teeth watching with a mask of rage on his face. Broken arm or not, he was still wielding that club; hunger did that to men. Hor knew he was the better man in this fight, but in the next instant he felt an excruciating pain coming from his leg. Hor shoved the club away with his shield, buying him a moment to check for his wound. And sticking out of his own thigh was the crossbow bolt Wormwit had fired. Had the petchin' idiot shot him? No, there was the wounded man, blood flowing from his thigh where the bolt had been before he had pulled it out. The man had stabbed him with the bolt! Red clouded Hor's vision, and he stomped his boot onto the man's wound, releasing him. He was going to pay for that.
But not before Hor rid himself of buck teeth, who struck again at him, this time aiming for his leg with the intent to hammer the bolt in further. Hor was having none of that, stepping out of the way so the club would hammer thin air. Hor swung his sword hand down, striking buck teeth in the wrist with the hilt of his sword. Forearm already fractured, buck teeth couldn't do anything but drop his club; that signaled the end for him. Hor swung at an arc, striking the man in the neck with the sharp side of his sword. It didn't decapitate the man, but from the large amount of blood flowing onto his blade, Hor knew he had hit a kill spot. He didn't even look to see the man fall as he turned to survery the carnage.
It seems Carsten had been the one who followed him into battle. Oh, now she was a fighter. A severed hand rested near her foot, along with the corpse that the hand went along with. Only one street rat was still alive besides the wounded man, and Wormwit quickly changed that as he fired for the second time that fight, catching the man Carsten was fighting in the neck. All that was left was the wounded man. The soon to be dead man.
Hor walked over to him, slowly but with a purpose, to the man who had stabbed him with the bolt. He was leaning against the wall of the alley, breathing heavily. But he looked up at Hor, no fright in his eyes. This was a man who knew what he had gotten into, and had accepted it. He was fighting to survive; Hor had done the same. But in this world, the fittest survived. And between these two, Hor was the fittest. The man didn't even release a scream as he was stabbed between the ribs. He died like a true Sunberth would die.
But a scream was heard in that alley, agony that chilled Hor's blood. He stood quickly, and headed back to the first wagon. The first he noticed was a head, just the head, rolling on the ground; it was the Benshira guard's head. But it was the driver of the second wagon who released the scream. He still had his head, but his torso was impaled on an odd sword held by a man whose entire face was painted. This had to be the same man Mocto has mentioned was tormenting his caravan. For what reason, Hor did not know.
But the man was here, and Hor was apart of the caravan now. He now had a new enemy, and this man was no begger with a club. |