Valhalla Rising [Jameson + Lethia]
Posted: 27 Sep 2020, 22:26
Prying the axe from the fallen man’s skull with a stomach-churning squelch and a splash of grey mush against the floor, the muscle-bound behemoth gave a long suffering sigh and slipped his boot under the risen, and subsequently re-killed corpse’s shoulder, and kicked him over onto his back. The man wore a tattered suit and tie, either was grimy and threadbare from years of neglect. It was unusual, he thought, to find one of these creatures as aged as this one, for as long as they had apparently plagued the town. There would be little of use on him, besides the ear that would net him his bounty.
It was grisly work, but it was work that he enjoyed. While there were bigger bounties and badder creatures that skulked in the dark, he figured that he would work his way toward them, in time, opting to instead take the safer route of learning what he could about the things that were here, and what it was that he could and couldn’t handle on his own. Perhaps, he thought, it would be better to find a group. Surely the larger of the things here would be worth more of a bounty, and would provide him with so much more of a challenge than these sprites.
He lifted the dead man’s suit jacket and wiped the sludgy blood from the blade of his axe, before he stood and turned to see the dead, bleary glare of a woman standing inches from him. How she had managed to stumble so near him without his noticing, he couldn’t know. She was a tiny waif of a thing, a stiff breeze could have snapped her in half. There was little more to her than skin and bones and straw-dry hair. He lifted his arm to abruptly stop her lunge, only for her to grasp hold of him and tighten her grip of his forearm. Milky, dead eyes stared emotionlessly into him, her mouth hanging open in a soundless scream as saliva rolled from her lips as she leaned in to try and bite him.
He felt like he should panic, but he didn’t. Something in him told him this was hardly the worst thing that was going to happen to him tonight, and with a mighty shove, he sent the thing flying away from him and crashing into a wall, sending her to the floor in a heap. As the adrenaline began to abate, a stinging ache began to spread through his side, and, lifting his hand to his abdomen, he felt a warm wetness that he hadn’t expected. He lifted his hand to inspect, and found it covered in blood.
His blood.
He looked down, and came to realize that, during the struggle with the little zombie, he had been shot. Whether it had been on purpose, one of the other bounty hunters in the area after the little thing he’d broken, or a complete accident, he wouldn’t know. He laughed, the sound mirthless as he placed his hand over the wound, doing what little he could to keep pressure on the spot, though black blood pumped between his fingers at an alarming rate, surely not a good sign.
Glancing around, he decided that leaving was in his best interest, and hooked his axe through the loop on his belt and hurried himself back toward the checkpoint, and hopefully to a medic before it was too late. Barely a block before he reached the abandoned fire department, he collapsed. Too weak to carry himself anymore, he growled to himself and pulled himself to the side of the abandoned street and leaned himself against the wall of a grimy building that had been left to rot quite some time ago, and did his best to try and rest. Maybe, if he took a minute to gather his strength, he could drag himself the rest of the way. And if not, then at least he died fighting. It was all that he could ask for.
It was grisly work, but it was work that he enjoyed. While there were bigger bounties and badder creatures that skulked in the dark, he figured that he would work his way toward them, in time, opting to instead take the safer route of learning what he could about the things that were here, and what it was that he could and couldn’t handle on his own. Perhaps, he thought, it would be better to find a group. Surely the larger of the things here would be worth more of a bounty, and would provide him with so much more of a challenge than these sprites.
He lifted the dead man’s suit jacket and wiped the sludgy blood from the blade of his axe, before he stood and turned to see the dead, bleary glare of a woman standing inches from him. How she had managed to stumble so near him without his noticing, he couldn’t know. She was a tiny waif of a thing, a stiff breeze could have snapped her in half. There was little more to her than skin and bones and straw-dry hair. He lifted his arm to abruptly stop her lunge, only for her to grasp hold of him and tighten her grip of his forearm. Milky, dead eyes stared emotionlessly into him, her mouth hanging open in a soundless scream as saliva rolled from her lips as she leaned in to try and bite him.
He felt like he should panic, but he didn’t. Something in him told him this was hardly the worst thing that was going to happen to him tonight, and with a mighty shove, he sent the thing flying away from him and crashing into a wall, sending her to the floor in a heap. As the adrenaline began to abate, a stinging ache began to spread through his side, and, lifting his hand to his abdomen, he felt a warm wetness that he hadn’t expected. He lifted his hand to inspect, and found it covered in blood.
His blood.
He looked down, and came to realize that, during the struggle with the little zombie, he had been shot. Whether it had been on purpose, one of the other bounty hunters in the area after the little thing he’d broken, or a complete accident, he wouldn’t know. He laughed, the sound mirthless as he placed his hand over the wound, doing what little he could to keep pressure on the spot, though black blood pumped between his fingers at an alarming rate, surely not a good sign.
Glancing around, he decided that leaving was in his best interest, and hooked his axe through the loop on his belt and hurried himself back toward the checkpoint, and hopefully to a medic before it was too late. Barely a block before he reached the abandoned fire department, he collapsed. Too weak to carry himself anymore, he growled to himself and pulled himself to the side of the abandoned street and leaned himself against the wall of a grimy building that had been left to rot quite some time ago, and did his best to try and rest. Maybe, if he took a minute to gather his strength, he could drag himself the rest of the way. And if not, then at least he died fighting. It was all that he could ask for.