His blood stopped and went cold.
Rudolf had been kept well busy by the task of stemming the tide of Blightbeasts to the east, his whirling greatsword the space-denying anvil to Izayoi's lightning quick hammer. His insistence on those countless late nights spent training, moving, hammering weight and momentum into his frame were paying hefty dividends here; were he less used to the weight of the blackened plates that cloaked him he would tire far too early, were he less diligent in maneuvering the blade, always so impotent with only the curse laid atop its nimble steel, he would have doubtless left gaps a corrupted beast could slip through.
But everything clicked. All elements fired in concerto, each swing carried power into the next, and he was able to keep up with his own output, free to focus on holding his ground where before he may have needed to scurry away, for fear of his hide being punched through. The eastern flank was swiftly piling with carcasses as he forged that insurmountable wall of steel and flame, shoving the final wave back enough for Izayoi to give chase. Her katana flashed through the dying daylight, the fangs of a wolf at the heels of an elk. Inescapably familiar. The shape of so many engagements that featured his family name, come to think of it.
1Starting off at a trot after her once the last remnants of those that had stayed at his side were cut down, Rudolf only noticed something was awry when he saw Izayoi veer off hard to the left without warning— shouting for Miina. Eliane had been downed? Was that not the report of
her gunblade—
And
then, the roar hit his bones, and his eyes went wide within the shadows of his greathelm.
Thundering footsteps, smashing into the frozen earth.
His breath caught in his throat, and despite the warming cloak gifted by his master, he felt a chill deeper than winter inside his gut.
A back lined with long, black, and evil spines, jutting out from a mane of coarse wire around the shoulders and running all the way to the tail, each one as sharp and deadly as the fangs, the claws, the horns atop its' brow.
Beneath the clamor of the battle, the maille by his joints jangled, ever so slightly. His knife shifted out of time, swaying when it needed stilling— Tremors. He knew of this beast, of what it did to the unworthy, of its high status among all the monsters the cruel world had forged to test man. And that knowledge filled him with tremors, quaking fear, even with all he had experienced. It brought him to a halt— task and duty driving him forward, but raw, wise instinct pulling him back.
A powerful frame, easily the size of a house or more, knocking lesser blightbeasts aside like children discarded toys. Muscle rippled from beneath its fur, each limb a redwood trunk, strong enough that even mighty dragons scarcely ventured down from their mountain perches to challenge it. Its baleful gaze was the last sight of so, so many warriors, all stronger than the tiny man that had first answered king Leonhart's call to arms by half at least. A scourge of the earth. The King of the Badlands. A name only uttered in hushed tones, the type that reverberated inside Rudolf's greathelm before being torn apart by the wind.
"Behemoth..."2It was true.
He wanted to run.
Even when he had foolishly believed he would be living out his days as an auxiliary hireling, he would never have dared join one of
these hunts. That way courted death, more than any other the swordsman village ventured. The mightiest among them, the elites of the clan— it was them alone, and never an assured return. Hunting parties of two or three were considered the minimum safety net when word of one becoming a problem made its' way through their gates.
The same village that didn't blink twice, for comparison, at sending its' initiates out alone to stalk and kill tigers as a coming-of-age ritual. That attributed their blazing red hair to the Himstian tradition of mantling their crowns with the blood of strong beasts. That he had watched, a dozen separate times, tell men younger than he little more than
"Have fun!", when they said they wanted to run to the North and join the war— to taste the Ospreyans' famed swordplay for themselves.
It was like asking himself to face down Leviathan or Ultima, all over again. Even knowing he had, seeing a Blighted version of a beast that he had so long know he wouldn't
dream of taking on...
Damn it all. He really,
really would have loved to be able to run right now.
"We need to charge! The Behemoth must die before it and the horde overwhelm the militia!" Came the bellow of the Limbtaker, furiously rallying everyone she could in the face of this horrifying monstrosity— and she was, of course, right on money.
His legs began to move once more, breaking the rime beneath as he maintained his original course, looping around to hit the southern fron from the side. He had no "Elites" to pass the buck to in the here and now— whatever his thoughts said, the whole reason they were in this mess to begin with was because they, the Warriors of Light,
were the only elites available. It was either them... or these militiamen, who had proven no hope against foes much more mundane.
He grit his teeth as he stormed into the fray. Each stride that carried him closer seemed to double the thing's bulk in his vision. Each roar shook his bones deeper, deeper, until he was sure even that shadowy demon that settled aside his soul felt the Behemoth's power and fury
3. No mistaking it— he was just as terrified as they were, as the smallfolk that had been fleeing their homes to begin with were. If he had to take this thing down, where did he even
start?
At the precipice of the Blightbeasts' mass, already past the strewn bodies of those knocked aside by the Behemoth, he gathered the strength in his legs. The open wounds were out of the picture— seething with blight as they were, he didn't dare plunge a blade into them for fear of suffering the same fate as Arton, wherever he was. To say nothing of how they seemed to be doing nothing to sap the Behemoth's strength.
There was one answer to that question— he'd asked it dozens of times about as many things— that had always stuck with him. An old, old memory.
"Nah, that's just what you do when you're scared of someone you're fighting. I know Otto puts the fear of Etro into me...""Before it decides to bend the aether and drop a Comet on our heads!" he bellowed, before springing forth in a mighty leap, sailing in from the Behemoth's flank. With those wounds off-limits, he had to forge his own path through the thick, leathery hide and deal real, appreciable damage. And with the Behemoth's size, that was no easy task.
"We have to leave it no room for reprisal!"Imre's head lolled back over to face Rudolf, a wolfish grin plastered over his features, dagger-sharp even at eleven."...so I try and hit him as hard as I can right out the gate, before he gets the chance."Obsidian sparks flashed again as he drove the bone-hilted dagger deep, with gnawing, burning weight behind it, to try and find purchase in the thick sinew of it's back, just past the joint of the shoulder. The sturdy construction of the rondel was designed for exactly this, in addition to punching through the armor of men— against massive beasts, it served as a vital grappling point, like a whaler's harpoon.
4His greatsword blazed black in turn, painting a disk of inky flame as he tried to use whatever leverage his first strike could muster to bring it straight down through the mane, and into the scourge's thick neck. If he could sever the spinal cord in one go, there was no way it'd be able to fight back at
all— let alone turn its Naturalborn Magic against them.
- 1. Probably why Esben figured it was what you were going for to begin with, rather than contenting yourself with a static defense meatgrinder.
- 2. Oh, see, like that.
- 3. I get what we're going for here, but the resonance through the steel of his armor is already enough. Sidenote, I've taken the liberty of abrading away the minor scuffs this thing collects through travel and in the so-far inconsistent moments where it actually has come between an infected wolf's teeth and my host's skin— I believe in looking fashionable. It makes you fight better. And your enemies see a good polish and fight worse, because they think not looking fucked up means your armor's never seen use. A lot of reasons to keep doing what I'm doing, all for the low price of sometimes having a few cinders fly off.
- 4. Just don't lose this one like the lance. You'll be in a real funk if you have to go through this whole country without your comfort knife.