Part 2
“Oi! Having a nap, magic-man?”
The guard’s spear
clanging against the metal bars jolted Daim awake. With manacled hands he best
rubbed his bleary eyes against the late afternoon sun.
“Thought you wizard
types didn’t need no sleep,” a voice guffawed from Daim’s left.
“Naw naw, you thinkin’
about them vampires, mate!” cackled the guard who so unceremoniously had woken
him.
“Wot you a vampire? You
can hang upside down from the top of the wagon, we won’t mind,” he teased, much
to the amusement of the other guards in the convoy, who joined him in raucous
laughter.
“Alright, alright, quiet
down lads,” the Captain called from the front of the pack. “Poor bloke be
losing his head soon enough, no reason for you lot to make him pray for it to
come sooner.”
His head ringing, Daim
tried to make out the Captain astride his steed through the cage.
“Thank you, sir-” he
began.
“Oi shut it! Who said
you can talk eh?” the guard said, smacking him with the butt of his spear.
Daim stared daggers at
him, rubbing his bruised arm and imagining the horrific torments he would visit
upon his captors. If only he was not bound, in a cage, in a prisoner convoy,
with four armed guards, headed to the city where the magistrate was sure to
take his head.
The hopelessness of his
situation dawning on him, Daim slumped down defeated onto the dirty straw floor
of his pen, as the convoy passed through Wickerwale forest, between the College
and Stonehaven city.
His wrists and ankles
ached under the heavy chains, and his head hung heavy with dark thoughts.
The forest road turned
and twisted between the trees. “Eyes open lads, the road is treacherous,” the
Captain warned his men.
The wagon driver nodded
grimly. “Aye, there been reports of kidnappings in these parts. Some
slaughtered livestock too. Reckon a new gang of bandits moved in.”
The younger guards
marching on either side of the wagon smirked to each other.
“Aw bandits know better
than to mess with the city-guard,” one of them swaggered, puffing out his chest
and clapping spear against shield. “Haha yeah, let ‘em come, bet the magistrate
would pay good coin for their heads,” the other chimed in.
Their bravado was cut
short as a blood curdling howl echoed through the forest.
Roosting birds flew out
of their nests in terror, and the Captain’s horse reared back, neighing
hysterically, almost throwing him off.
“Easy, easy!” the
Captain yelled, frantically pulling on his reins.
The wagon ground to a
halt, as the guards peered through the trees and gloom, weapons at the ready.
Daim sat alert, heart
pounding, his breathing quick and shallow.
“W-what was that?” a
guard stammered.
“That didn’t sound like
no bandit,” another mumbled.
The forest grew deadly
quiet. Shadows seemed deeper, the trees taller and more unwelcome.
“Maybe you should let me
out, I could help-” Daim began.
“Shut up!” a guard
yelled out, hitting the bars with his spear again.
The metallic clang
reverberated in the still air.
The Captain glared at
the noise. “Quiet you idiot,” he hissed.
“The prisoner was being
rowdy, Captain,” the guard drawled, staring accusingly at Daim.
He turned just as a
mountain of fur, fangs and claws erupted from the brush, lunging at the guard
with a deafening roar.
The werewolf crushed the
guard against the wagon with such brutal force, the bars bent under the strain.
Daim was thrown against the other side of the cage, and he watched in horror as
his captor was disemboweled barely a foot from him.
The horses pulling the
wagon screamed, breaking their reins. The driver was yanked off his seat as the
horses galloped away, dragging him behind them until he untangled himself a
couple dozen yards down the dirt path.
Maw drenched in blood,
the beast growled at the remaining guard, who stood shaking, his spear held out
in front of him.
Thundering hooves drew
the werewolf’s attention from its hapless prey, as the Captain charged towards
the beast. His horse foaming red at the mouth, he bellowed a mighty warcry,
drawing his blade.
The second werewolf
leapt from the trees, slamming into both horse and rider.
The Captain hurled to
the ground, his horse pinning his legs. His cries turned to bloody gurgles as
the wolf snapped its jaw shut on his throat.
The last guard turned to
flee, but to no avail. The first werewolf sped after him in a flash, and was
upon him in seconds. The guard’s shield splintered under its savage claws, as
the wolf went in for its second kill.
Daim prayed to whatever
gods he could remember, old and new alike, for him to be spared from this
grisly fate. His supplications were cut short by twin twangs ringing out from
the trees.
The first werewolf
paused, as if surprised.
Daim looked on as the
wolf keeled over, two green arrows protruding from its thick throat.
A hooded and cloaked
figure emerged onto the forest road with bow drawn and arrows nocked. Daim
stared silently, mouth agape.
The other werewolf
noticing the stranger, left its half-eaten wagon driver, and sprinted hungrily
towards its fresh quarry.
Tulin moved faster than Daim
could believe, and shot off two arrows towards the swiftly approaching beast.
One missed. The other
embedded itself harmlessly in its mangy shoulder.
The wolf swiped at
Tulin’s head, claws whistling through the air. He rolled out of the way, and
fired another arrow, this one finding its mark in the beast’s leg.
Tulin shuddered and
winced, almost losing his footing. Daim saw that he was bleeding through his
cloak.
“The elf’s injured,” he
realized, with rising panic. “And if he goes down, I’m next!”
Tulin steadied himself,
face pale and set in a pained grimace. He cast his bow aside and drew a long
curved knife from his belt.
The werewolf surveyed
him carefully, pacing back and forth, eyeing the five feet of earth between
them, and the slow trickle of blood dripping from his side.
With a vicious howl, it
charged at him. Tulin steeled his footing and braced for the onslaught.
The air suddenly burned
and an explosion blasted the werewolf off of its feet.
The stench of burned fur
and flesh assaulted Tulin’s nose as he saw the smoking ruin of the wolf's back,
melted down to the bone.
He turned to see Daim
kneeling in his cage, hands outstretched and pulsating with arcane energy.
“You’re welcome,” he
panted.
Tulin paused. He tipped
his head in gratitude, and turned to leave without a word.
“Hey hey! Where are you
going? Help me out of this!” Daim cried out behind him, rattling his chains.
Tulin continued without
looking back. “You’re a criminal. You probably did something to deserve being
in that cage.”
“What!” Daim yelled
incredulously. “I saved your life, you owe me Elf!”
That made Tulin turn.
“And I killed the other werewolf, I’d say that calls us even. Besides, a
resourceful mage like you can make your own escape.”
“No no,” Daim shook his
head, tired. “That was my last spell-scroll. I don’t have any left, I’m
defenseless. And I’m not a criminal! My name is Daim and I am a member of the
College of Misthold.”
“This situation,” he
continued, gesturing around him. “Nothing more than a simple misunderstanding.”
“They put you in chains
with an armed escort over a simple misunderstanding?” Tulin asked with raised
brow.
Daim grew visibly
exasperated.
“It doesn’t matter!
Without me you would be a pile of meat and bones. I saved your life, you owe
me!”
Tulin stared hard at
him. Daim held his breath.
“Alright.”
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