13th Day of Season, 351th Year of the Age of Sundering
Crash.
Tangled limbs and armor. The sounds of fighting coming from within the open doorway directly ahead of him. Masagh set his hands and feet under him and righted himself. Grabbing his sword and ignoring the pains of the impact he looked up. Ahead, inside the main rooms of the safe house Masagh saw Cleon battling with another Vampyre. Blood flew and the ghoulish Knight’s claymore sang in the air. Beyond him more tangled bodies. The house seemed to extend long and narrow. The first floor seemed full of combatants, at least another four. Above him the silhouette of the Inquisitor glared down at him. Her naked blade held at her side.
Masagh moved into the doorway, avoiding the line of sight. Vasile was sparring with what looked like two more Inquisitors at the same time. Dexterously moving about to deny them any advantage. Sabrione and Cleon were both fighting a blood wielding Vampyre. Masagh stepped forward and plunged his blade quickly into the unguarded back of the nearest Inquisitor fighting Vasile. The woman groaned and collapsed, her body sliding off his claymore.
Vasile’s eyes barely flickered to him for a moment before he was once again deflecting blows from his second opponent. Sabrione’s worried gaze followed Masagh for a moment. Her worry was not for her younger brother though, it was for the three enemies above. The Inquisitor had not pursued him off the balcony, which meant Calliope now fought both a Vampyre and the Inquisitor above.
Masagh shouldered past Vasile’s opponent, hopefully knocking him off balance as he did so. The ghoul did not stop to see. If Calliope fell and the Inquisitor escaped with the crate of lodestones, their messy raid would be for not. Also, five Knights would be four. A loss they could not abide.
He scrambled up the tightly turning stair to the second landing. Calliope was there on the stair now, standing over the crate. She had the Inquisitor’s long blade pinning her to the wall. As Masagh appeared around the corner, the remaining Vitalitasi companion of the Inquisitor lunged to strike Calliope a killing blow through the heart. Masagh lunged forward to deflect the blow. A scraping filled the air briefly as the claymore sent the smaller blade’s tip sliding along the sandstone. Masagh angled his sword and shoved through the longsword towards the Inquisitor at the top of the stairs.
The woman had to step back, withdrawing her sword from Calliope’s side. Masagh saw the dark gleam of rotting flesh and ichor on the blade and felt the cold focus of rage within him. He swung viciously in an arc that was meant to keep both at bay. He felt a tap on his shoulder, Calliope signaling her return to the fight.
Masagh stepped onto the landing and faced the Inquisitor.
“Not had enough, undead filth?” She asked in common.
“Make your peace with your god, redvein.” He did not hear the trepidation he felt in his heart reflected in his voice and was thankful. It was only gravel and acid. She frowned and drew in her off hand a two pronged blade. Akin to a fork, it had a thick prong and a thinner prong with an edge. A sword-breaker. Used to catch blades and disarm opponents, the device was a devious weapon he had not faced before.
He could not let his weapon be caught in it. His blade moved swiftly, and hers caught it just as swiftly. The strength of his blow jarred her one-handed longsword and she brought the sword-breaker up to help deflect the blow. His hilt high and blade low, he strained against her. Then he brought the pommel up hard into her face, as Sabrione had done time and time again to him. The blow sent her reeling back.
Finding his blade pointed directly down, Masagh thrust in that direction. He aimed for and found the tendon and bone of her ankle below the greave. His claymore drove home into both her ankle and foot with a popping resistance. It tore through tendon and ligament.
The Inquisitor cried out at she stumbled back. To give her credit though, she did not fall. Grit and tenacity, an impressive specimen. Perhaps she would earn an elevated role when they inevitably bound her to undead service as a thrall. She thrust forward with her longsword, but he battered it away. Then he made to slash her across the torso and she deftly brought the sword-breaker up. He heard his blade grate as the cold iron met steel. It was enough to keep her life for the moment, but without the longsword she could not manipulate the larger claymore.
She brought it up with a crash against his blade. They fought on, their sparring growing more and more haphazard as their strength flagged. Claymore met longsword and sword-breaker with momentous blows and the pair came in quick and precise in return. Masagh had never fought so hard in his existence. He could feel the strain in his decayed body.
Finally she managed to catch his blade near the hilt. Her gaze lit as she twisted and pulled the sword free of his grasp. With only a fleeting moment of panic, Masagh stomped down on her wounded ankle. Hard.