Peter Brett – The Skull Throne (страница 13)
Ashia examined the deep wound in the
‘What would a woman know of such things?’ the warrior demanded.
Ashia stood. ‘This woman saved your life,
A demon leapt at her, but she bashed it aside with her shield, sending it sprawling near one of the other
Another demon leapt for his back, and Ashia had to shove the warrior aside to stab at it. She struck a glancing blow, but the angle was poor, and the force of the
Ashia gave ground for two steps, batting aside flashing paws with her shield. The demon tried to snap at her, and she shoved the edge of the shield into its jaws, lifting to bare its vulnerable underbelly. A kick put it onto its back, and before it could recover its feet she fell on it, pinning its limbs as she stuck her knife into its throat.
She was getting to her feet when something struck her across the back of the head. She rolled with the blow, coming up to face the
‘You dare lay hands on me, woman?’ he demanded.
Ashia cast her eyes about the battlefield. The last of the demons was down, her
‘Find your centre!’ she shouted to the man as he advanced on her again. ‘You owe me your life!’
The
‘The other I knocked senseless at your feet?’ Ashia asked. ‘As my sisters slew the reap that would have killed you all?’
The man’s answer was a swing of his spear, meant to knock her across the face. Ashia caught the spear shaft and twisted until she felt the warrior’s wrist break.
The others were coming in hard now, the magic thrumming in them multiplying their natural aggression and misogyny. To fail in battle and need to be saved was shame enough. To be saved by women …
Ashia spun behind the warrior, rolling across his back to kick the next man in the face. He fell away as she charged the third, slapping his spearpoint aside and striking her open palm against his forehead. Stunned, he stumbled until Ashia caught him in a throw that sent him tumbling into the other two, struggling back to their feet.
When the men recovered, they found themselves surrounded by
‘Pathetic.’ Ashia lifted her veil to spit at the men’s feet. ‘Your
She did not wait for a reply, whisking off into the night with her spear sisters in tow.
They ranged farther, but most
Ashia found the tracks of a large passing reap, and the others followed silently as she tracked them. They fell upon nearly thirty
Half the reap was dead before the demons got it in their heads to flee. By then Ashia and her sisters had coaxed them into a narrow ravine with steep sides not suited for their loping strides. At a signal from Ashia, her sisters broke into smaller formations, each cornering several demons.
Ashia let a group of
The demons shrieked and launched themselves at her, but Ashia could see the strikes before they came, written clearly in the lines of their auras. Stolen magic gave her speed as she bent and turned a half circle, slapping the jaw of the quickest to redirect the full force of its attack into the path of two others. She sidestepped the jumble, stabbing stiffened fingers into one demon’s belly to knock it aside.
The wards on her fingernails flared with power, and the magical feedback that came from direct contact was a hundred times stronger than that which filtered through the wood of her spear. The field demon was thrown back, rib cage scorched and flattened, and struggled to rise. Ashia kicked the strength from another demon’s leg just as it was about to spring, sending it sprawling. The next she chopped to the temple, blinding it.
How dare that man strike her from behind? She should have killed him as an example to the others.
The
Ashia shoved her entire forearm into the demon’s chest. Inside, the creatures were as vulnerable as any surface animal. She caught a grip where she could and yanked free a fistful of gore. The magic was thunder in her soul now.
The Deliverer gone. The Damajah living on a knife’s edge. Enkido dead. And her own spear brothers would as soon kill her for emasculating them as accept her aid. It was too much to bear.
She grew more aggressive, leaving her neutral stance to pursue retreating demons instead of lulling them in. She had scolded the
She caught the next demon to leap at her by the head, turning a circle to use its own strength to break its neck.
Ashia took another pass, kicking, punching, and positioning herself for deadly strikes of her fingernails to the
Her vision grew red around the edges, and all she could see was the next demon. She did not even look at their bodies, only their true forms, the lines of power in their auras. It was these alone she saw, these alone she struck.
Suddenly her vision went dark, and she stumbled in her next strike. Another target appeared and she struck hard, but it rebounded off a shield of warded glass.
‘Sister!’ Micha cried. ‘Find your centre!’
Ashia came to her senses. She was covered in ichor, and all around her lay dead
Micha caught her elbow. ‘What was that?’
‘What?’ Ashia said. ‘I was honouring our master with
Micha’s brows tightened as she lowered her voice to a harsh whisper the others could not hear. ‘You know what, sister. You lost control. You seek to honour our master, but Enkido would be ashamed of you for such a display, especially in front of our little sisters. You are lucky the
Ashia had been struck many times over the years, but no blow had ever hit as hard as those words. Ashia wanted to deny them, but as her full senses returned she saw the truth.
‘Everam forgive me,’ she whispered.
Micha gave her elbow a comforting squeeze. ‘I understand, sister. I feel it too, when the magic is high. But it has always been you we look to for example. With our master dead, there is only you.’
Ashia took Micha’s hands in hers, squeezing tightly. ‘No, beloved sister. There is only
Ashia’s robes were still wet with demon gore as she made her way back to the palace chambers she shared with Asome and their infant son, Kaji.