Blood of the Underworld(113)
Carson stood, held his sword out to the side. Something sparkled in his brown eyes, and it made Haern’s head ache.
“What do you say to that? Leave this pathetic group you serve. Whatever coin they pay you, I promise we can increase it tenfold. They only hold you back.”
Haern took a single step, just enough to shift his weight so he might leap with greater speed. Carson saw it, and he held his sword before his chest.
“If you agree, we’ll leave the rest of your group alive. Decline, well...you’re still a threat needing to be dealt with. Make a choice, Watcher, but do us both a favor...make the intelligent one. You’re too good to be weighed down with petty morality and friendships.”
Despite the danger, Haern let out a laugh.
“You think I do this for the coin?” he asked. “You damn fool. Give your signal. We’ll see who dies tonight.”
It was a bold bluster, a way to keep the fear for his friends hidden. He had to trust them, trust his own abilities to finish off Carson in time to help the others. Carson shook his head, looking disappointed. Their eyes met, and there was death in them.
“And you call me the fool,” he said. Something about his voice had changed, as if he were suddenly hurrying his words. His free hand lifted, and when he went to snap his fingers Haern lunged at him, sabers leading. Sword a blur, Carson parried both to the side, then shifted so his elbow slammed into Haern’s chest as he came crashing in. Breath lost, Haern swung twice in a futile attempt to keep the man on the defensive while he fell back, gasping in air. Carson parried them with ease, holding his sword with a single hand. His movements showed no slowing, no panic. He didn’t even look like he was breathing hard.
He can’t be that good, Haern thought, trying to decide his next attack pattern. I’ve fought Thren, the Wraith, Dieredon...he can’t be greater than them.
During his indecision, Carson snapped his fingers, then winked.
“Time for some fun,” he said, again in that clipped, rapid speech, and then the roof of the bakery erupted in flame. Before he could react, Carson stepped in, sword slashing. Haern blocked, always a fraction of a second away from missing. He kept his swords out wide, using the only advantage he had. No matter where Carson thrust or slashed, Haern had a blade ready, just a flick of a wrist away from parrying. Not that it mattered. Carson thrust, looped his sword around, thrust again, and when Haern tried to block the second, he batted both sabers aside as if Haern were a child. The tip of his sword continued unabated, piercing through Haern’s shoulder.
Rolling away before it could punch deeper, Haern knelt on one knee, fighting off the urge to clutch the wound with a hand. His sabers shook in his grip as blood ran down the front of his shirt.
How? Haern wondered. How can he be that fast?
Carson stepped closer, and in desperation, Haern employed his most skillful delay. Spinning, he grabbed his cloaks and flung them into the air, turning faster and faster so that his movements were a blur, the location of his hands and swords undecipherable to any but the most skilled. It should have worked, but Carson only shook his head, as if disappointed. Something felt wrong. Haern noticed it just before Carson attacked, unnerved by the cloakdance. The cloaks were hanging lower than they should, seemingly falling faster than usual, unable to maintain momentum.
Flinging himself back, Haern realized what was wrong. It wasn’t that Carson was moving faster. It was that he was moving slower. While the magic affected him, it did nothing to the cloaks. All of his senses were dulled, delayed. The slurred speech, he realized. Even his hearing was affected. It didn’t appear to be much, just enough to sap away his greatest advantage.
Carson stalked closer, unworried about Haern’s sudden retreat. And why would he? Could Haern get away if he ran as if pushing through molasses? Forcing himself to stay calm, he continued his backward retreat. High above, smoke blotted out the stars, the results of the fire that continued to burn. Heavy concussion sounds rocked the building. Tarlak was still alive, but for how long?
“Have you given up already?” Carson asked, steadily approaching. “You’ve yet to make me break out a sweat. You fought so well earlier...what happened, Watcher? Have you lost your nerve?”
What had happened? He’d fought both Carson and the dagger thrower simultaneously. Yes, he’d been pushed to the limits, but still he’d endured. What was different now? What slowed him so?
“Come,” Carson said. “Look me in the eye so I can see your fear as you die.”
The eye...
Haern stared into those brown orbs, and again he felt an ache grow in his forehead. Tarlak’s words echoed in his ears.