Once, twice, three times, he did not and would not stop himself from plunging the blade over and over again into the wretched thing. The wet crunch of cloth and leather and muscle giving way to his knife as it ripped into Heren was as satisfying as the man’s spasms each time it punctured his body. That was for Thorin! he thought as he stabbed hard and deep once more. For… Katarn. Why not? For petching Heren! The lad, whoever he had been before, was almost certainly dead, stuffed in a cupboard somewhere while his killer pranced around wearing his likeness. After that, Elias couldn’t think of anymore names to avenge, not that he truly needed an excuse. It just felt good to have a driving force behind his arm as he gutted this freak over and over and-
He stopped suddenly.
Not because he wanted to, but because he had no choice. His blade refused to move. With a grunt, he tried prying it free of where he had left it in Heren’s side, but it just wouldn’t. Bloody. Ugh! Budge!
Oh shyke... Heren was beginning to stir.
The beats was moving, shifting his weight from a hunched position, and all of a sudden Elias was starting to feel something creep up his spine. Something he should have been feeling since this whole debacle started if he’d been smart. A feeling he’d denied himself and wrestled under control, as he’d been taught to -as he’d been expected to- but now that feeling was back, and its icy grip around his heart tightened with every unnatural shuffle and squirming mass dancing beneath Heren’s clothing.
Slowly, painfully, the creature began to rise. Elias’s tugging on his blade became more frantic, desperate even. Why wouldn’t this god damn thing move! Pushing his flux to its maximum, he tried again to rip it free of whatever prison had ensnared it. Nothing! No give, just the scraping sound of… He looked down, seeing for the fist time the knife in his hand protruding from Heren’s side. All around it, where there should have been skin and blood, instead Elias found himself looking at a carapace of bone. Bone not hacked and clawed away, but instead grasping the knife like a vice and locking it in place!
There was that feeling again, its chill renewed and palpable. He could feel his heart betraying him, pounding against his chest to a maddening rhythm as his breath caught in his ragged throat.
Terror.
That feeling was terror, and as he slowly, unwillingly craned his gaze back up to meet Heren's, he saw the face of it staring back at him with hollow eyes and a mouth of dripping, melted flesh.
In that instant, Elias felt something thump against his shoulder, nearly knocking him over had he not been holding unto the knife’s handle with such a death grip. When he looked down to see what it had been, eyes shaking with trepidation, he realized he’d had every right to be afraid.
With a scream of anguish, Elias drew back, his shoulder numb and burning from a pain so instantaneously intense all he could do was suffer. The flesh colored appendage shifted around inside of him, causing another guttural cry of agony to burst from his lips before the bug like stinger ripped itself free in a spray of blood that sent the Caldera reeling backwards. He barely noticed the other three arms sprouting from Heren’s back like the first as they lunged at him, just missing their mark as the stryfer collapsed to the floor in a convulsing heap. He’d banged his head hard against the metal bars of the cell, but that hadn’t even registered to the young man. The pain he felt where the morpher had stabbed him was unlike anything he’d ever experienced before. It made words impossible. Thoughts inconceivable. All he could do, all he wanted to do, was writhe and scream until at last he could simply die and it would just be over.
His voice grew horse and rasping as he howled, kicking and thrashing like a madman possessed. What in the name of god was this? Magic? Poison? How did he make it stop?!
Through the tears, Elias could see the monster growing closer, its shuffling gate and twitching body a mockery of man’s form now as it discarded all pretenses and shaped its shambling body into something less suited for disguise, and one more defined by killing. Its fingers were now an array of long, gnarled talons, much like its feet as they clicked against the cobblestone towards him. His back had sprouted four of what the Caldera, even in his haze, could only describe as barbed insect arms, though the things looked more suited for punching holes through armor and bone than they were for pestering. It was its face though that would be thing that would haunt him for the rest of whatever few moments of life he still had left. There was no definition of anything, no wrinkles or scars, just a dead, empty eye, slotted into place like a piece of a jiggsaw puzzle as it drooped over a mouth as cavernous as it was horrifying. There were no teeth, nor a tongue or any sort like that, just simply an empty black void gaping at him. Tendrils of oozing flesh dripped like slithering stitches from top to bottom, and as the abomination drew ever nearer, Elias could see that maw slowly curving into a grin.
This was it then... this was the how-
With a boom, the door to the prison cells burst open, splinters of wood thrown left and right as the city guard came rushing in. The monster paused, as did the men at the door aiming their crossbows and shouting. It was all a blur to Elias through the torment of his wound, but he didn’t need to sense their fear to know it had taken root in them.
Blood and spittle dribbled from his clenched and cracking teeth as he bit down against the pain, but somehow, someway, he found the wherewithal to scream.
“Kill it!”
The mutant roared as the first crossbow bolts bit into its carapace. Men, the bravest kind, charged forward after the first volley, swords and axes in hand as they dared to challenge the horror. The thing spared Elias one last unreadable, nightmarish look, before it surged forward to meet them. It crashed into the clump of armored watchmen like a tidal wave, throwing them left and right with frightening ease as it continued on through the door and out into the fortress. The instant the monster left the room, Elias felt his body slacken, the pain in his shoulder finally dimmed to that of something a mortal man could withstand. He gasped for air, his whole body strained and stressed by the way it had twisted against the agony. It took a long moment just to pry his fingers from his palms in particular, but eventually, he found his senses one more. Getting back to his feet was going to be a whole different story, yet he struggled towards that goal none the less, all the while listening as the screams from down the hallway grew fainter and fainter with distance.
That thing was getting away, tearing a swath through the guard on its way out, and the stryfer knew full well there was nothing in this fort that could stop it.
Two men had rushed to his side after the mayhem, trying to help him to his feet, but he angrily shooed them away. “Go after it, damn you!” He hissed, sounding particularly pathetic after his ordeal as he leaned his head against the bars, but they heeded his commands none the less, dashing from the room to join the chase with their fellows.
When they were gone, Elias realized he was all alone.
All alone, except for- a hand touched his shoulder from behind, and the swordsman stiffened, reaching for Thorin’s discarded sword. “Its only me.” He heard a small, stifled voice whisper.
The slave girl… right.
“Are you…” her voice trailed off as her hand neared the hole in his shoulder.
“No.” Elias answered flatly, still staring forward. He didn’t think he was going to be ‘ok’ for a long time after this. “Do you-” he swallowed, trying to find his voice again “do you know what that was?” As he spoke, something caught his attention from across the blood stained room.
She hesitated at first, noting how he had yet to face her, but then after a while he could hear her leaning in closer until only the metal bars separated them. “My master was a great man. A very brave man. He swore an oath to us keep us safe when Morwen abandoned us, but his enemies were many. One in particular was relentless in its hunt, and so my master dedicated himself to learning everything and anything he could about them. That’s why that one was here. He hunts me not because of what I am, but because of what my master revealed to me. But you,” she went on, something new and dangerous tinging her voice “You stopped it. Even wounded it. My master never told me everything he knew, but together, you and I can uncover his secrets and defeat the-”
Her tirade of hope ended abruptly in a muffled cry, and she looked down to behold the res slithering from Elias’s arm, through the bars, and unto her flesh.
Lightning struck, yet there were no clouds, and the slave fell limp and unconscious with a terrible shudder.
The stryfer never turned around to face her, his eyes locked on something else even as he twisted the sword in his grasp. He couldn’t even be bothered to watch her tumble to the floor. Instead, his focus drifted over to the distant, empty gaze of Thorin laying next him in much the same position as Elias now found himself in. The dead man was staring back at him solemnly.
With a wince, he gave the soldier an apologetic shrug.
“A thousand split one way, brother…”
Cults, secret wars, monsters in the city?
Elias didn't want any part of that. He had enough bloody troubles of his own, and he damn well wanted no part anymore, not if it meant he'd have to face that... thing again. No, this was not his fight, and even a man with as much pride as he was not blind to such a fact.
Thorin had no reply, and slowly, gravely, Elias returned his focus back to the thing he had been staring at across the room, the thing that had arrested his attention so. For upon the wall where he and the assassin had struggled in death's bitter embrace, there remained nothing of their fight save but a single, bloody smear of a red hand.