Chapter Six
“A mighty flame follows a tiny spark.”
― Dante Alighieri
Caleb didn't bother with going to the Armory. Truth was, with each barony he had, he didn't bother with going there more than was needed. He left that to those who actually ran the place. They knew what they were doing, as they were the ones taking care of it before, during, and long after whatever baron held the seat at the time.
But he had made his way there this time. He had received a notice that a letter had been left for him and the staff was reluctant to touch it. He stepped back out of the Armory with the note in hand, still folded up, and turned to look over his shoulder.
"Make sure you put those fliers up around the district." That was about as much as an order as he had made, at any time, with regards to his 'title'. As he stepped out of the gate, he turned and moved back towards where he had left Karma.
Why oh why had she decided a run for governor was a smart idea?
Who knew. But the point was, she was doing it. Which meant a slew of things to do and they needed to be done in as little time as possible. Perhaps it was because running for Governor wasn't conducive with sitting cooped up at the ranch. Call it a subconscious need to get out and to buck against whatever it was trying to keep them there. She came back to him, meeting him midway up the footpath that led to the barony's armory from the gates leading to New Haven. Somehow she was managing an effortless balancing act of coffee cups, a thick binder, and the strap of a backpack over a shoulder.
"Did you know Rhybux has been serving pumpkin spice lattes since the middle of August and I'm only just now getting one?"
A true travesty right there.
"What? Three weeks and you're just now getting one? My barista skills have taken a hit." There was a mock hurt there in his voice, but it was belied by the half-grin that slid up the opposite side of her.
He lifted the note, and gave the outside a cursory glance. There was more to it, but he wouldn't open it here in the public's eye. He tucked the note into a pocket then reached over, taking the binder out of her hands so that all she had to worry about was the coffee. The backpack would take care of itself.
"Considering you live almost exclusively on vodka, I'm really not holding you accountable." She said with a laugh that cut through the late summer, early fall air. This late in the season, the woods of Battlefield Park were fast cooling, the leaves already turning shades of burgeoning bronze and a deep scarlet red. Still she held fast to the last slivers of warmth, wishful thinking coming in the form of tattered jeans and a low dipping top. Heels weren't practical for hoofing it around the city, so the whole ensemble had been rounded out with high top sneakers, the heel of which she dug into the dirt beneath her foot.
"You know, it's a wonder your inside bits aren't pickled by now." More teasing coming with an easy smile as he helped offload her proverbial baggage. "How'd the stop at the ghost house go?"
"Someone left a note about a possible job. Didn't read deep into it, but the cover said something about babysitting." It was rare that he talked about jobs, but this one was different. And he had seen enough to see Karma was privy to know the info about it. "We can look at it further when we are home."
He was in his usual, though with the weather changing, it wasn't so odd that he was in the duster, her duster. At least, not as odd as it had been during the summer. He looked to her and gave that crooked grin. "And they might be."
"Babysitting?" She said, half skeptical, half surprised. Maybe it was a code word for something. Still, she could poke at him about it. "Are you even CPR certified?"
Not quite wanting to stand in one place but still content to take their time considering how nice it was outside, she turned to fall in at his side so they could walk together. The meswen grove, with the silver trunks and blue leaves was off to the right, offering a tinge of fragrance on the air in contrast to the more crisp smells of the rest of the forest even though the fruit had long since been harvested for the season.
"I think I got everything I needed for the day. Runners are handling the fliers and advertisements, by morning it should be everywhere... papers, radios, TVs. What do you think about a billboard?"
"Would it surprise you if I said I was?" He glanced her way as they started walking again. He watched her for a moment as she went on about the various advertisements she had taken care of, and he couldn't help the answer that came with her question.
"Can't say I think about them at all."
"Very little surprises me about you, Caleb, save for the fact that you're full of surprises." So yes. Maybe. A little bit. The exasperation that followed came with a bump of her hip into his. "I meeeeean for the campaign. Is that overkill? I wanna be thorough but I don't wanna be like... overwhelming, you know?"
He actually laughed! It wasn't a full belly roll, but there was nothing dark about it either.
He kept walking with her for a few moments, giving the question serious thought. "I don't think they would be necessary. In all honesty, most in this city don't look up."
"That seems like a lovely way to walk into signs." She replied blithely. "There's so much to see in this city, I never understood why people keep their heads down. Fear, maybe?"
It made sense. Best way to survive in a city of gods and monsters was to either become a monster yourself or make yourself so small the monsters didn't notice you.
Though it was still early afternoon, the chirping of the birds and distant sounds of other forest creatures seemed to fade little by little as they walked closer to the meswen grove, prompting Karma to tilt her head a bit to listen.
"People do what they will to survive. If you find someone who doesn't... run."
"Mm." She hummed a noncommittal sound but said nothing more than that as she tipped her coffee cup back to drink its entire contents in one continuous series of gulps. It burned like hell, but it was better than wasting it. As she swallowed, her nostrils flared and her voice dropped a little as her feet slowed to a stop, her hand catching at his forearm. In the quietest breath of a whisper, she asked, "You hear that?"
He didn't stop, but as she grabbed his hand, he tugged her along. His voice was barely above a whisper. "Keep moving." There was no urgency in his steps, nor in his voice. It was simply a command, and he didn't like giving her commands like that. To cover her pause, he paused too, after a few moments of pulling her along.
"I don't know why you insist on carrying all that campaign stuff in that backpack. You know it's a pain to carry around." His voice was casual, much like it had been earlier. Even his movements didn't alter. He reached up and pulled the bag a little, taking the weight off of her and started to slide it away from her. "I'm just a beast of burden, having to lug around all this weight." There was that teasing tone again.
She gave the faintest jerk of her head, a barely there nod that said she understood. Her feet shuffled back into motion, no more than a brief misstep masked beneath the adjustment of the backpack. She twisted slightly so that he could take it off her shoulders.
"You're a beast, but not of burden." She looked vaguely smug at that quip even if every sense was on high alert. Somewhere to the side, just beneath the faint scent of meswen came the faint scent of decay. Not wholly unusual in the forest, all things considered, but it seemed particularly acrid, tinged with an all too familiar whiff of the void itself. Her gaze seemed to dart occasionally toward a patch of unnatural darkness just beyond the grove's treeline.
"Who makes horrible coffee, apparently." There was that smirk that tugged on the edge of his lips as he stood there waiting for her. "So where are we going next?" He kept his left hand tugged under the single strap of the bag as it settled on his shoulder, looking every part of a school kid with a backpack. The right pulled the duster back and a thumb hooked into the front pocket of the leather pants. Completely at ease.. completely ready for whatever may come.
"Not horrible, just not R-bux pumpkin spice. Look, somewhere deep within my fucked up and convoluted genetic code, there is a baseline of basic white bitch there. You're lucky I didn't get the Uggs gene." She snorted, slightly regretting chugging it down as fast as she had. "But I figure it's better to have everything I need and not need it, than to need something and have to go home for it."
The darkness seemed to be spreading. The forest had gone still and silent.
"I'll hire an R-bux barista to personally come in and make sure you have your fix of anything and everything you like, since my skills are not up to par for basic white bitch life." There was almost laughter in his voice as he waited there for her to decide where they were headed to next. Come on, darkness, my old friend.
"Orrrrr you have them teach you the secrets. Then you get to be the supreme barista beast of burden whatever." She fluttered a hand idly, though this close he might be able to feel the first tinge of arcane energy accumulating in her fingertips. It came just in time for the sudden beating of wings behind them. She let go of his hand, whirling to push a hand upward to pump the energy into a reflexive shield. A split second later, a cloud of darkness crashed into it and rebounded into the dirt, kicking up a cloud of dust that was eaten by the blackness soon enough. The scratching of claws and the fluttering of leathery wings within the shade gave little indication as to what it was.
"
Wxudt zdxuqxy*," The abyssal was thick on her tongue, the guttural language unwieldy and inelegant. Then like a flip of a switch, she shifted almost easily into another unwieldy tongue that Caleb was far more likely to recognize.
"
Sen, toeo beben't kolen blind."
When the attack came, he twisted and pulled the strap that his hand was entangled in. The backpack came whipping around, but as soon as he saw her shield that bag was yanked back. He didn't know if it would penetrate from this side and still leave the shield integrity in place, and he wasn't going to take that chance. That was something he would remember to ask about later.. and work with her on.
Instead, he dropped the bag and quickly withdrew the two blades that he was known for, and stepped in front of her, though not so much as to block her line of sight, or the aim of her outstretched hand. There was that tightness around him, like a coiled snake, ready to strike.
He didn't pay attention to her first words, but the second caught his ear, and there was a smile that slid upon his lips. Be it from her ability to quickly use it, or his soon to be answer.. well..
"
To beben. Beben to slip ily and hibne disturb the hantak?"
The beating of wings on their left and right stole her answer before she could spit out more Thieves Cant. Like some sort of Tai Chi master, she swung her arms out to the sides and brought one foot up just along the outside of his nearest knee, the pose serving to anchor the shielding on three sides of them instead of just one. Pointedly, she was looking at him, up, back, anywhere but at the darkness.
"Caleb, if it's what I think it is, you cannot make eye contact with any of them... even in the dark." Wham, just as she spoke, their flanks were assailed by two seemingly separate clouds of inky black from the one she had knocked into the dirt. "Your blades can pass through but not you."
Again, the creatures on the other side crashed into the shielding, prompting a warbling echo of white-gold light to burst back at them like divine retribution. A trio of hisses cut through the air. Karma exhaled.
"Fuck you, Mother."
A cluck of a tongue to the back of her teeth and with it, pitch black bled around her, engulfing them both and spreading through the waning afternoon light that had steadily dwindled around them under the pressure of their assailants' magic. The difference though was that this darkness was stifling to all but those she deemed worthy and she could see plainly as if it were high noon. Caleb would find he could too. Their friends on the other side of the shield however let out cacophonous screeches of rage when their quarry disappeared into the patch of midnight there in the clearing. It was as good of a signal as any for Caleb to do what Caleb does.
He didn't let the sudden shift phase him as he might have once. He had long sense trained his mind to accept it, and it was already working in a different direction anyways. A quick slice of a blade along his shirt, and a moment or two in securing, and he had a double wrap around his eyes, essentially blinding him. There was a quick smile and he shifted over and set a kiss to her, knowing where she was without even a hesitation. A quick whisper after and he stepped away, out into the darkness. "
Soon bina to kaltan baker, drop the resa. Nau ii focus ka to, oe salan oe."
"Aye." A single word, all they needed. With that, as soon as he stepped out, she shifted the shield to drop the left flank's cover. The hellish creature beyond scrabbled to make the most of the opening and soon it's friends on the other side took notice as well and began shifting around the shield's convex plane to try and get to the opening gap. Though she could see fine in the arcane darkness, she knew she too had to avoid any errant gazes from the creatures coming their way, as they moved through the shadows and confirmed her worst fears.
Death stealers. Demons loathed even by the foulest of the abyssals thanks to their penchant for devouring their prey's very soul. What was nasty on its own but three? Karma groaned and tried not to focus on the gargoyle like beings nor their beady glowing yellow eyes. "Three coming. Nine o'clock." She warned him and dropped the entire shield at once to save herself the concentration for what would come next.
As soon as he was out, he was moving. They were making enough noise that even a rock knew where they were. Which made it easy for him to shift quickly to the closest. He twisted and sliced the right blade along it's flank, but when the left came around, there was no purchase found. But he had hit it, which meant it knew where he was.. as likely did the others. Good. Let them focus on the assassin.
It quickly became readily evident that they were here for him, not her. Even with the shield gone, in the darkness, as best as they could orient, they seemed intent upon the assassin rather than the woman with him. They were still a deadly whirlwind of claws and teeth even with the darkness rendering their gaze next to useless. Karma pointed and with it came a burst of malevolent energy in a vibrant burst that exploded just inches from Caleb's head upon impact with one of the leathery gargoyle like creatures. She followed it with two more, searing the thing, although not nearly enough to slow it down.
The closest to Caleb took a swipe at him, the black claws curled as if it was trying to gouge out the heart. Even blind, the assassin heard the rustle of the wing as the arm was pulled back, and he stepped in, rather than stepping back. The sickles seeming more like claws as he brought them up and quick down again into the opened chest of the one attacking him.
In a blink, it was as if the assassin had been surrounded by night, the trio of fiends circling him for a better vantage point. While it put Caleb at quite the disadvantage, it gave Karma a clear shot at the back of another one and she unleashed another bolt, this time of radiant light. It crashed into the back of the beast and burned a hole right through its shoulder, leaving the entire thing shrouded in a dimly glittering mystical light. It screeched and turned away from Caleb and toward Karma, who grinned in the darkness.
"C'mon then, what're you waiting for." Her fingers curled as she beckoned without looking the thing in the eye, much as she wanted to. After all, could it steal a soul that didn't exist? What she didn't expect, however, was the echoing of an unfamiliar voice within her head answering her question.
"Abomination, ssssssweet flesh... musssst needs resissssst. What these onesssss would not give to tear thisssss one asssssunder."
To Caleb, it probably sounded like a whole lot of guttural garbage. To Karma, she looked mildly disgusted. Having no answer, she conjured a radiantly glowing blade to her hand and raised it to point at the fiend. "I think that's enough of that. Call it off before I tear all three of you apart."
The faint rumbling under foot said that might be harder than she thought.
With one pulled away, he kept his attention on the one that was in front of him. That wasn’t to say he didn’t feel the press of the other, or the attacks that it was intent on landing. Not that he could see them, mind you.
He dropped as he felt the air pressure shift, and then came the wind from where the one in front of him swung where his head had been. Then he stepped to the left, moving.. always moving.. to dodge what he felt was coming from behind. The first swung by, but the second caught his shoulder and there was a grunt as he felt the claws tear a line along the right shoulder blade.
He didn’t shift his focus, as much as he wanted to, to that one behind him. Instead, he kept at the one that was in front.
The sickles, the more and more he used them, seemed to be true claws.. extensions of his hands, as he first swiped the right along the abdomen, then tore the left down one of the creatures arms, then the right came swinging back, stabbing into the one that was in front.
Much as she wanted to assist Caleb in his uneven battle against two of the nasties, she knew better than to get in the way of his sickles or of the claws. But when one gouged a chunk out of his shoulder, she narrowed her eyes and quickly drew a sigil in the air before her. It appeared like in a soft pink light and with a gesture, she urged it Caleb's way at which point it zipped over and popped against his cheek like a sweet peck of a kiss. With that, he was shrouded in a similar light to help ward and protect him from whatever might come his way. It left her with just enough time to raise the radiant blade for a single upward cleave through the nearest death stealer. Mortally wounded, it crashed to the ground and let out a mournful howl of rage.
Karma was ready with a cheeky quip but her moment of glory was stolen a moment later by a booming voice behind them all.
"Now, now. Do we not tire of this charade? Enough children."
Karma whirled about to find a massive armor clad figure walking their way at a casual pace as if he wasn't approaching a melee of blades in the darkness. This one... this one she wasn't familiar with. And that sent a bolt of fear down her spine. Perhaps the two fighting Caleb felt something much the same for they too froze, disengaging from the assassin to fly back and up, out of reach, their yellow eyes turned toward the now looming warrior. Karma moved to put herself between him and Caleb only to find her feet wouldn't move, no matter how she tried.
"Who are you? What do you want?" She asked, her voice holding steady, at least for the time being.
"Shh, child. You'll know soon enough." He unsheathed a sword that had to be as long as Karma was tall. Perhaps longer. But he didn't level it her way. Instead he pointed to Caleb. "Come, face me."
He had learned long ago to split his attention. During her... kidnapping, he had been so focused on her that he had forgotten that. It could have easily cost him. This time, he didn't forget. He kept his attention on the one that was in front of him.
That is, until both it and the one behind him shifted. He felt them move before they did. There was tension in the air around them. Something bigger.. badder, had come. The air shifted as they flew back, but he didn’t follow. He wouldn’t extend himself like that. No, instead, he turned towards the new threat.
He turned and moved towards the new threat, though he kept part of his attention on the two that had fled, as well as on Karma. He wasn't sure what was going on (still blindfolded), but he knew enough that there was something wrong with her, and this new threat was the cause of it.
He didn’t bother with responding, but his steps moved towards him, setting himself between Karma and the new threat. Caleb's answer to the challenge was simply to stand there, blades in hand, waiting.
As Caleb turned to face the armored fiend, the creature let out a great booming laugh. The sort that made the changing leaves tremble on their branches. In the distance, birds scattered. Karma felt a ripple of goosebumps break out down her arms and up her neck. Still, her feet wouldn't move and not even the divinity in her veins could push her to fight that feeling.
"Caleb..." She spoke his name but trailed off there, unsure of what to do or say.
"Fighting blind. It is almost as if someone has prepared you." The fiend chuffed, his gaze burning into Karma for the briefest of instants, unconcerned by the magical darkness that surrounded them. He towered over them and even made the gargoyles look small. Easily close to ten feet tall and clad in stygian armor plate mail, he wore a horned helmet, the tips of which shimmered with what looked to be dried blood. Behind the helm, cruel ember like eyes peered out at them. Malevolent amusement rolled off of him like palpable waves. "Look me in the eye, boy. Face your absolution."
"Worried what others will say when they find out you lost to a blind man?" There was a smirk to his voice. Was he goading the creature? Yep. Another tactic was to put someone off their game, and what better way than to get into their mind?
He began to move then, but not towards the thing. No, instead, he started to move the left, almost as if he was circling the thing.
This one, however, seemed more intelligent than the other things that had been sent their way so far. The helm canted to one side almost quizzically.
"Covering your eyes does not make you blind any more than it makes the nightmares disappear in the dark of night." He chortled, terribly amused. The massive sword was whirled with dexterous ease as if it were no more than a toothpick. "But if you wish to be, I will assuredly pluck the eyes from your skull, dear boy."
He then struck out, once, twice, coming with a pacing gait that matched Caleb's. Water testing blows, more than anything, he wanted to test the man's mettle.
As he moved, he slid away from the first blow. Though he couldn’t see it, the blade seemed to scream through the air. At least, to his ears.
The second blow that came across his chest, however, cut a line along the shirt as he didn’t step far enough back to avoid it entirely. A fraction of a inch closer and there would be blood. But only the shirt suffered the damage this time.
Still, those blades.. his fists.. were up and at the ready. Relaxed for the moment, until he had to use them.
He was at a disadvantage being blind. Distances were harder to calculate, but he had done it before. It would just have to take time. Besides, he trusted Karma and she had told him to not look them in the eyes.
"Caleb!" Karma cried out when the blade shredded through her fiance's shirt. But he seemed otherwise unscathed.
"Ah, good. Good. There's fight in you yet." He rumbled and took another lazy but crushing swing for the assassin.
"The gargoyles, Caleb, they're the ones you can't look--" She found herself abruptly cut off by a motion of the fiend's hand, the charm hitting her hard enough to sap not just her words but her breath too.
Instead of stepping aside from this swing, he stepped in, the left coming up like he was protecting his head from a blow. But the length of the sickle claw was laid along his forearm and he used it, along with an angled step, to deflect the swing that came downward and away. With that same hand, a thumb caught under the blindfold, yanking it free.
The right? He swing it around in a tight hook, as he kept moving forward, the serrations that edged the curve leading the way. However, he twisted his wrist out just enough that the blade came off his forearm like a flared wing, slicing out past the serrated hook.
Upon removal of the blindfold, Caleb would be treated to the same view Karma had, the monstrosity before them towering over even the gargoyles, who had long since fled for the shadows out of view. Even they were not intent on getting in the master's way. Karma's feet, still rooted to the spot, seemed cemented to the ground, leaving her paces away while Caleb and the armored creature clashed. Despondent, she focused her energy into remedying that at the least so she could help.
Caleb, meanwhile, landed one solid blow, in part due to the magical nature of his blade. Had it been a normal weapon, it seemed as though he wouldn't have had nearly the luck. But rather than back off with the connection, the fiend let out another booming laugh and tried to bring the blade down upon the much smaller man, followed by a hammer handed throw of the blade's pommel toward the assassin's head.
It was all about conservation of energy for Caleb. Smaller.. faster.. that didn't mean jack shit if you wore yourself out, and being smaller, you had to move to keep from having your head bashed in by someone bigger. Fighting with Runt had helped him in this kind of training.
That left hand was still up, and he kept it there, using it to once more parry the strike that came downward, sending it veering off. He knew he wouldn't be able to go all day like this, but for right now, it was better to deflect than to try and stop that massive blade.
But when the pommel came swinging back around, he didn't move in time. The left was already up, fortunately, and it absorbed the majority of that impact. The right came around quickly, trying to help absorb some of the impact, or perhaps lessen it, as he slammed the bladed forearm into the giant's wrist.
That was enough to jar his blade but not enough to disarm him. This time around, he let out a massive roar that seemed to shake the very ground beneath their feet. He took another swing at Caleb, spinning a full circle as he cleaved the autumn air around them. When the whirl came to a stop, he raised his palm not toward Caleb but toward Karma instead.
A breath of a whisper, a female's voice, two words; "Now fall."
The barrage of much smaller blades that formed were too quick to stop, a veritable storm of them sent toward the immobile sorceress. She raised her arms up as if to protect herself, but it wasn't enough. One, two, three, a dozen, a dozen and a half, more... unstoppable, rending flesh and eliciting a tormented scream from her that echoed through the trees as if it were amplified until it was bouncing back upon them. The echoes wail was all that could be heard as Karma sank to her knees, clutching at her stomach and chest as if it would make a difference. She slumped over a moment later, unmoving.
The massive fiend laughed a cruel laugh and brought his blade down upon Caleb once more.
It seemed two could play the psychological mind games.
As that blade came around this time, he dropped under it.
He watched as that hand was raised towards her, and he stepped to try and put himself between it and her, but he couldn't. Not in time. He didn't look. He kept his gaze on the massive one that was in front of him. To avert his gaze was death. He knew that. But that didn't mean that he wasn't acutely aware of what happened, nor the red that threatened to override his thoughts.
His eyes started to flatten, turning a bit gray around the edges. But they stopped that change just on the edge. A breath was taken. Then another... and still his attention was on the one in front of him.
"I doubt her mother would appreciate you hurting her, let alone killing her. I'm your target, after all." His voice was soft. He was not above using any trick needed in order to get the advantage. He assumed that this.. thing.. was here on her request, and he would use that if he could.
And that was the only thing he said before he launched forward, sidestepping to the right the blade that came down and running his left blade up along the giant's arm as he went.
"Eh," the giant looked unconcerned by Caleb's soft reprimand. Though it couldn't be seen behind his steel helm, he was assuredly smirking if not grinning fully. "If anything, call it expediting her return to her mother. I'll be thanked and you'll be dead, it all works out."
The pair played out the back and forth clash, seldom making major headway in one direction or another. For each blow landed by the assassin (the human one at least), the seemed the fiend managed one in trade. Perplexed, and perhaps a little annoyed, by the lack of progress, the fiend elected to resort to dirtier tactics than before. Images, dozens of them, all recreating horrible horrible instances of Karma dying, all around them. Audibly, Caleb was treated to cacophonous screams of pain and terror, a cruel ploy meant to unnerve and exploit Caleb's seeming one weakness; her.
"What was the line? 'Even the strongest of shields cannot defend the weakest of wills,' I think it was?" Karma's words, only from the fiend's lips.
He stood there, watching the creature as his peripheral took in the.. well, the nightmare. His eyes started to lose focus as they delved deeper into the gray.
With each death dealt (as such), he folded deeper within. Darkness, in its way, started to engulf him.
Then a flash of red caught his eye and he looked to his hand. It was her ring, and it was the beacon in the darkness... a lighthouse in a raging sea.
His focus quickly came back on the creature and there was a smile as he remembered her teachings. He hardened his mind to what was playing around him and he looked the creature in the eyes for the first time.
"You underestimate her will and mine."
Caleb.
A quiet tickle at the edge of his consciousness. Familiar, benevolent, but insistent.
Caleb, he wants you to lose your cool. But I'm here. I'm okay. Don't let him get to you.
The fiend brought his blade down at just that time.
Remember what I taught you... end it here.
As he heard her words, the smile that came to his lips hardened. It was no longer a thing worth looking at. Instead, it seemed to have death's smile written on it.
He shut his mind down. He shut it all down. This creature questioned their will? He was about to find out what will really was. He put his trust into her... into her training. His mind hardened as he sidestepped that blade and moved to put himself in front of Karma.
The shield was a shield once more. However this time, the shield grew claws. Defense.. offense.. there was a saying somewhere in there, but it didn't matter. The assassin had slipped into the mental void. He would trust her to take care of herself. He would trust in her and her teaching.
He attacked with the cold calculation of one who was intent to kill.
Silenced, unable to move, it was all Karma could do to break through the illusions around them, including that of her unmoving body on the ground. If all she could do was mentally encourage him, then it would have to be enough.
He uses the shadows better than you do.
Thanks ShadoWeaver.
Just speaking bluntly.
As if you speak any other way, right?
ShadoWeaver was quiet after that, leaving Karma to her helpless observation of the clash before her. It was killer versus killer, assassin versus assassin, a clash of David and Goliath of sorts, if the biblical story were shrouded in shadows and surrounded by the echoes of nightmares. After a brief give and take, the slip of Caleb's blade hit a joint in the giant's plate armor, sliding into the minute gap between layers to rend the flesh beneath. The echoing roar said he struck true, prompting a series of reflexive, wild swings to try and fend off the smaller fighter. The sticky black ichor that spilled from the wound offered satisfaction of a precise jab and even as he swung out, a leg buckled and the giant sank to his knee in the dirt.
There was no hesitation when the giant dropped. Caleb moved, slid in and around the blade and brought his own up, flipping both around so that the blades were outward and no longer along his forearms. They came up and laid along the neck of the creature, much like a pair of scissors, and Caleb, in a smooth motion, sliced in both directions, bring the blades together, and then past each other.
"Ah, a worthy de--" The fiend's words were cut off, quite literally, with the severing of his helmed head. The slash of dual blades spilled a fresh spray of ichor as his head went tumbling. With the cruel creature's demise, so too ended the illusions, including that of Karma's body on the ground. Her feet were freed and she was able to launch herself toward Caleb, his name a cry on her lips as she went to him.
"Fuck..." She exhaled, breathless and pale. "We gotta go now though..." Her hands reaching for him, seeking a hold so that she could get them out of there before the gargoyles returned.
He stood there a moment, but as soon as her hand reached him, he turned and looked her over, very quickly. It was almost as if he was making sure she was there, rather that just in his mind. But he felt her... really felt her. And he nodded.
"I'm here, I'm here." She said, hopefully to reassure him and maybe to convince herself a little bit. Taking his hand into hers, she wound her other arm around his, sucked in a deep breath and ripped reality around them. It wasn't a clean escape, but the beating of wings in the treeline said it didn't need to be clean if it meant they were safe. A whipped whirl through the aether spat them through a corresponding tear at Paradiso Ranch, spilling them both into the entryway of the house, their safe haven. The warm trickle of red from her right nostril was quickly wiped away from an ungraceful sprawl on the marble floor, as she looked up to find they were safe and sound.
And being stared at by a guilty looking raccoon wearing a mask over its eyes while carrying what looked to be a small, gilded sculpture... that definitely hadn't been in their home before.
((*Wxudt zdxuqxy = Death stealer
Sen, toeo beben't kolen blind = Run, we can't fight blind.
To beben. Beben to slip ily and hibne disturb the hantak = I can. Can I slip through and not disturb the shield?
Soon bina to kaltan baker, drop the resa. Nau ii focus ka to, oe salan oe = Soon as I step out, drop the left. When they focus on me, you do you.))