As the others talked, the Myrian paced. Mere chimes ago he was wounded, near-crippled, useless, and now he was... renewed. Armed as a warrior should be and with enemies clamoring entry to meet his blade. But now things were getting complicated.
New arrivals ran into the cavern, footfalls echoing even on sand around the high ceiling. Two children, boy and girl but so alike they must be twins, loaded down with weapons and armor. Two more, adults, follow them. The tall, armored human who had the steady, controlled gaze of a soldier had joined the dark-haired healer around the-
Well, isn't this one full of life.
The white-haired woman - Kav, he thought he name was - was rapping off questions, orders, instructions, some of them too fast for his grasp of Common to understand. But the fragments he did told him much. Down here was secure. The stones gates would hold. But above? There were animals. Supplies. People.
And he knew from short but hard experience that it wouldn't take these monsters long to figure that out.
"So.. thoughts. Headcount. Where do we stand? These gates should hold here and I can solidify them if we are really worried. What we need to defend is up top. That's our lifeblood. Ideas?"
Razkar opened his mouth and before a word could escape the man who had healed him gabbled in Common. This one? Not a warrior. But he was brave enough to be down there, which was enough for Razkar. So the Myrian kept pacing, rotating the gladius in his right hand, the ax in his left, growling so soft under his breath that only he could hear it.
His blood pounded. His heart roared in his ears. His Goddess called through dreams and time and space, bid him take full measure of these monsters again.
"I know I am outclassed here in terms of combat, but I will make sure everyone stays on their feet, okay? I've got to go get dressed. See you all at the front."
Elem (yes, that sounded right) dashed off and Razkar watched him go. He turned back to Kav and pointed after him. Enough of this pointless waiting. The longer they stayed the sooner those creatures would amass in such numbers they would strip everything from the building, living and otherwise.
"Not wait." He growled, loud enough to be heard over the other voices, Common choppy and aggressive as ever, if a little clearer. "Here safe. Horses safe. Er... Zith? Zith not get through. Up is where we go. On surface."
He grimaced briefly. The idea of fighting those things in the open again annoyed him. They were so fast and the sky was their greatest weapon. But they would have to. They had no choice and, once again, that just made it easier for him.
"Make, ah... team. Group. Each place where animals are. People with bow, crossbow, and people with ax, sword, dagger." He gestured to the former two in his hands. "In same group. We fight them. We kill them. But cannot stay in one big group. Where we not, they kill, they steal. Not good. We make groups, we split, we fight."
Razkar prayed that they understood him, and they would get moving. The pounding on the doors was not lessening but the rush of wings and screeches and scratches was. The Zith at the gate were thinning. Tiring. Growing bored and frustrated.
Heading upwards, for easier targets.
New arrivals ran into the cavern, footfalls echoing even on sand around the high ceiling. Two children, boy and girl but so alike they must be twins, loaded down with weapons and armor. Two more, adults, follow them. The tall, armored human who had the steady, controlled gaze of a soldier had joined the dark-haired healer around the-
Well, isn't this one full of life.
The white-haired woman - Kav, he thought he name was - was rapping off questions, orders, instructions, some of them too fast for his grasp of Common to understand. But the fragments he did told him much. Down here was secure. The stones gates would hold. But above? There were animals. Supplies. People.
And he knew from short but hard experience that it wouldn't take these monsters long to figure that out.
"So.. thoughts. Headcount. Where do we stand? These gates should hold here and I can solidify them if we are really worried. What we need to defend is up top. That's our lifeblood. Ideas?"
Razkar opened his mouth and before a word could escape the man who had healed him gabbled in Common. This one? Not a warrior. But he was brave enough to be down there, which was enough for Razkar. So the Myrian kept pacing, rotating the gladius in his right hand, the ax in his left, growling so soft under his breath that only he could hear it.
His blood pounded. His heart roared in his ears. His Goddess called through dreams and time and space, bid him take full measure of these monsters again.
"I know I am outclassed here in terms of combat, but I will make sure everyone stays on their feet, okay? I've got to go get dressed. See you all at the front."
Elem (yes, that sounded right) dashed off and Razkar watched him go. He turned back to Kav and pointed after him. Enough of this pointless waiting. The longer they stayed the sooner those creatures would amass in such numbers they would strip everything from the building, living and otherwise.
"Not wait." He growled, loud enough to be heard over the other voices, Common choppy and aggressive as ever, if a little clearer. "Here safe. Horses safe. Er... Zith? Zith not get through. Up is where we go. On surface."
He grimaced briefly. The idea of fighting those things in the open again annoyed him. They were so fast and the sky was their greatest weapon. But they would have to. They had no choice and, once again, that just made it easier for him.
"Make, ah... team. Group. Each place where animals are. People with bow, crossbow, and people with ax, sword, dagger." He gestured to the former two in his hands. "In same group. We fight them. We kill them. But cannot stay in one big group. Where we not, they kill, they steal. Not good. We make groups, we split, we fight."
Razkar prayed that they understood him, and they would get moving. The pounding on the doors was not lessening but the rush of wings and screeches and scratches was. The Zith at the gate were thinning. Tiring. Growing bored and frustrated.
Heading upwards, for easier targets.