"Your struggle is meaningless," the Pycon's voice rose above the noises of the battle, "you are infants trying to cut water; you are charging at windmills! You are nothing but cosmic mistakes, and I am here to correct you." He was brandishing some thin object with one clay arm, probably a fork that had gone missing the day before. It looked like a grotesque trident in the Pycon's grasp. The other arm was free but swinging left and right in the direction of Jilitse and Clarissa. Asking Clarissa to fight the power that controlled her was one thing; succeeding was another matter entirely. The child's fingers were still wrapped around the hilt, and her body was trying to pull out the blade for a second attack. The other orphans screamed and retreated upon seeing the struggle, utterly terrorized at seeing one of their own stab her friend Jillie for no reason at all. The Nuit turned sharply to keep Clarissa from pulling out the sword. Jilitse tried to headbutt her to momentarily put her out of commission, but it didn't really work out the way she intended - the shock and loss of ichor had made a Nuit's already slow reflexes even more awkward. What happened instead was that, when the hilt suddenly took a turn to the right, Clarissa's fingers were still not letting go. While in the end the sharp motion did wrench the sword out of her grasp, it also drew the little girl forward with it. She staggered off-balance, and let out a yell as she stumbled downstairs, arms in front of her for protection. Thankfully, the dead bodies on the stairs softened the fall to an extent, and Clarissa landed on her backside, dizzy and in pain on the very first step but apparently in one piece. If Jilitse thought herself in need of a weapon, she merely had to reach behind her back and pull out; of course, it would cause the gaping hole to leak ichor faster, as well. The pain she could manage... being the heroine and all that. Meanwhile, something was triggered in Stitch's brain. Like figments of dreams long past, memories from before his bad day. He knew how these things worked, did he not? He knew all the motions. And all this non-lethal crap wasn't the way he had first learned it, right? He knew it all, the little trick that makes you go swooosh and then crack and then the other guy falls to his knees and your hands won't stop and go swisssh, swift for the kill with the noise of light armor hitting the floor but you are no longer there, your torso twisting to the limit to throw the dead man at the second foe halfway through his clumsy excuse for a punch and, once downed, snap his backbone with a thud. And before Stitch could even realize this, two of his assailants were dead and the other two were screaming at the top of their lungs, waving their swords at him - now apparently determined to make use of them. Their auras filled with sudden fright, they tried to maneuver around the blind man to get him from two sides. "What the petch are you doing?" yelled the Pycon, his poetic vein of doom seemingly exhausted, "there is no freedom in failure! Can't you even kill a blind man, for petch's sake?" |