A muffled curse broke through the fighting behind him and Shade felt his pulse quicken at the sound. That was Caleb’s voice. He was certain of it. It was a sheer act of will to keep his mind focused on the memory and not turn to aid his friend, but Shade gritted his teeth and let loose three sharp whistles in a quick burst. He wasn’t certain it was the correct signal, but he was praying to Fortune it was.
The Gray’s ears pinned further at the sound and a squall tore from its throat as it launched itself into the air. Both hind legs snapped out behind it in a deadly attack that would have caved the skulls of anyone foolish enough to stand behind an Arovan Charger. As it was a sandstone wall was the only victim of the animal’s savage kick and the jarring impact propelled the horse forward while managing to dislodge Derrick from the saddle. The Rivasan scrambled to regain his seat and managed to tangle himself in the reins. The horse squalled again only this time there was agony in its call as the bit tore painfully into its mouth. Derrick was dragged several feet and barely managed to loosen his hand from the reins in time to scurry back from the furious animal. For a breath Shade thought the horse would do his job for him and then Derrick was clear of the animal and bumping into Shade.
“Fortune be praised.” Shade whispered as Derrick spun to face him. On a whim he let his camouflage drop as he drove his dagger hard up into the Rivasan’s kidney. “That was for Micah. You killed one of the few men I respected.” He hissed as Derrick’s eyes bulged in their sockets. He had caught the Rivasan completely off guard and with that one strike the fight was over. The man was well versed in magic, but not in pain. Shade knew there was no way Derrick would find focus with a dagger wound in such a vital place. Derrick pulled back on unsteady legs and tried to back away from him, but Shade stepped closer with relentless determination. He held Derrick’s panicked gaze as he drove the dagger hard into the man’s chest. The blade slid neatly between two ribs and Derrick expression froze in agony as the tip of the blade found the man’s heart. “And that was for his son.” Shade whispered as the Rivasan slumped to the ground.
It took several moments before the sound of the fighting behind him registered again in his mind. From the moment Derrick had bumped into him until he lay dead at Shade’s feet the rest of the world had faded away. There had been nothing but him and his victim and then everything rushed back in with a vengeance. A scream sounded behind him and he whirled to face the fighting. The ground was littered with several corpses, but there were still far too many enemies on their feet.
Shade’s eyes found Caleb within moments and his chest tightened at the way the Arovan was staggering. Blood soaked his armor and he could see at least two arrows protruding from Caleb’s side. The priest was holding his own against two swordsman, but a third was closing fast and archers were still firing whenever they had a clear shot. Grace Morcaillo circled the fight like a hunting cat, and by the way Caleb was trying to keep her in his sight Shade knew his mother had already traded blows with his friend.
“To stealth or not to stealth.” Shade murmured as he eyed the archers. “Buggering hell, stealth.” He muttered sourly. There was no other option at this point of the battle. He needed to eliminate the archers quickly and quietly. Grudgingly he summoned the camouflage once more and crept toward the far side of the battle. Perhaps one day there would be a battle he could fight honorably, but today was quite obviously not that day.
The first archer died soundlessly and Shade gave him silent thanks for it. The man’s comrades were fixated on Caleb and neither of them seemed to notice their companion die quietly beside them. The second was standing too close to his fellow for Shade to kill him without being noticed.
With a frown he pulled another dagger from his belt and studied the men carefully. There was a wall behind them with just enough room for them to draw their bows. It would be a tight squeeze to get behind them both and he would have to time it perfectly. If either of them stepped back or brushed against him all stealth was lost. The only other option for killing them both without a fight was to stand directly before them, and he wasn’t keen on the idea of placing himself directly in the path of their arrows.
The one closest to him had an arrow knocked and his bow drawn on Caleb. Shade’s mouth twitched in irritation as he shifted his form. He was still a Blight, but a much smaller Blight closer to Syrah’s size than a man’s. Eyeing both Archer’s warily Shade slid along the wall under the man’s bent arm until he was perfectly centered between the two of them. It only took a moment for him to shift back to the proper height, but in that time two more arrows were sent toward Caleb. Maybe I should have taken Hemlock up on his offer for Assassin training. Shade mused bitterly as he drove both of his daggers home simultaneously in lethal blows that dropped the Archers with no more resistance than their cries of pain and shock.