Episode Nine: Battle
While Claude works, Shirley packs up
his things and loads them into her car.
She crinkles her nose while stuffing his laundry into his bag. He never really got around to washing things,
and what few things he did wash were just at the top of the pile. This proves to her, more than ever, that
Claude needs her. He may consider himself
a hero in the making, but he needs someone around to keep him in clean
underwear.
After work, she and Claude gather
his remaining things and finish packing.
Then they return inside to say goodbye to Thomas and thank him for all
of his help over the past few months.
They shake hands, and Thomas tells Claude to take care of Shirley and
winks at him. Claude smiles bashfully in return.
Then, they leave. The storm is already gathering overhead,
full, fat dark clouds heavy with snow and eager to release their burden. They meet traffic on the way. The sky is darkened and opening. Snow gathers rapidly on the cold asphalt of
the roads.
“God,” Shirley says, shifting in her
seat and trying hard to see where the cars begin. It is far, far ahead, too far for her to see. She frowns.
“I always heard that traffic was bad in the big city, but this is
ridiculous. Think there is an accident?”
Claude stares ahead. He feels happy to be moving, to live with
Shirley, to start something new with her, but there are alarms going off in the
back of his head. His stomach twists and
knots.
“Hope it’s nothing bad, huh,”
Shirley says, leaning back into her seat and settling in for a long wait.
“Yeah,” Claude says, and realization
settles. He can feel it, danger, ahead. It is his reason, his purpose. He sighs through his clenched teeth. “Shirley, really, I’m so, so sorry,” he says,
pushing the door open and going to the back of the car.
“Claude? Claude!”
Shirley shifts the car into park and follows him out. She finds him waiting by the trunk with a
resolute expression and opens it for him.
He starts digging through his things before she can stop him. “Claude, what’s going on? What’re you doing?”
He pulls his bow from the trunk,
along with a quiver of arrows, and he looks her in the eyes. “The reason why I came here. It’s out there, waiting for me.” He looks ahead. “Or maybe it’s not waiting.” He returns his attention to her. “Either way, I have to go. I have to stop it.”
Shirley looks ahead now. She shivers in the cold. Snowy winds whip her hair around her. “You think it’s why traffic is all backed
up?”
“Probably,” Claude says. He fastens his quiver to his right shoulder
and checks it to make sure the fit is right.
Then, he slips the bow around his other shoulder. He shivers, now, too. “Whatever it is, it’s dangerous. And it needs to be stopped.”
“And you’re sure?”
Claude smirks at her. “Shirley, you know me. I’m sure.
I have to go.”
“But…”
“It’s my destiny,” he says, and he moves
to pass her. She catches him by the
hand, pulls him back into a kiss. They
stand there like this, their warmth breeding between them. He kisses her back, embraces her.
They part, and she smiles at
him. “That was for luck.”
Claude smiles, breathlessly. “Thanks,” he says. “I’ll be back.”
“I know. Just remember, I’m waiting for you.”
“You always do.”
“I love you,” she says, and he
pauses and smiles back at her.
“I,” he pauses to digest the words,
the feelings that were always there. “I
love you, too.” It feels natural on his
tongue, and he enjoys it. He takes her
hands and squeezes them. “Really, I do.”
“Well, go, then. Save the world,” she says.
Claude lingers, taking in the sight
of her. He will always remember this
moment, her standing in the snow, nose slightly red, eyes and smile shining
with pride, cutting through the darkness and doubt. The cars behind her make halos of light that frame
her and make her shine.
“I will,” he says, and he gives one
last squeeze of her hands before turning and running toward the unknown danger.
-The
Knights of Sheba-
“I am sorry to have interrupted your
night,” Ms. Olivia says, glancing at Geneva’s dress. Geneva tugs on the hem anxiously but stays
quiet. They are swerving through the
streets, breaking laws when necessary. “I assume I did interrupt something.”
“Something,” Geneva says, “But, to
be honest, I’m kind of relieved.”
“Oh?”
“Well, I mean, I’m not relieved to
be fighting deadly monsters or anything.
But I’m beginning to think that big parties aren’t my thing.”
“Then why attend?”
Geneva shrugs. “It’s what girlfriends do. I think.”
“The lives of human adolescents seem
so complicated.”
“You have no idea,” Geneva
says. “Do you have anything else I can
wear?”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean, dresses—good for wooing
your pretty lady-partner. Not so good
for winning a battle to the death.” She
smooths the dress against her thighs.
“Seriously, I won’t be too mobile in this.”
“True, I hadn’t thought of
that. If I had known, I would have
brought something for you.”
“Great,” Geneva says. She stares out the window. The sky is black, and so is everything
else. She can see police lights up ahead
or something flashing like them. “And
there’s a real demon here?”
“Unfortunately, it seems so, and not
just any demon. From evidence gathered
on the scene, they have informed me that it may be a lone target, but one that
is very large and very deadly.”
“Right, it can never be easy.” Geneva undoes her seatbelt and begins to
clumsily tug her dress off. Once out of
it, she tosses it into the back seat and settles again in her underwear. Her cheeks are burning red when Ms. Olivia
looks at her. She covers herself as best
as she can with her arms. “Don’t
stare! I know it’s weird, but what else
am I supposed to do?” She conjures her
armor out of modesty.
“There is no need for embarrassment,
Ms. Oaks. In truth, your dedication is
quite impressive.”
“Yeah, well, I did already bail on
my girlfriend to fight a demon. So,
there’s that, too.”
“I apologize.”
Geneva sighs. “Let’s just get this done and get me back so
I can do damage control.”
“Ms. Oaks, I must warn you to take
this seriously and be careful.”
“Right, because I was planning on
going in and getting killed, but you’ve got me reconsidering it. I mean, the more I think about it, being dead
might be relieving in the short, but I don’t think it’ll be as rewarding in the
long term.”
“Your jokes aside, we have fear that
it might be a demon lord.”
“A demon what-now?”
“Myths say that there was a demon
king, whose blood was distilled from the essence of their very gods. Seventy-two bloodlines descended from him,
each founding houses and declaring themselves lords upon his death. Those carrying this blood are said to be
endowed with strange, mystical gifts.”
Ms. Olivia pauses to let the information sink in, and then says, “The
texts are sparse, but…”
“So, you’re saying he’s, like,
what? The final boss or something?”
“I suppose? Honestly, I don’t fully understand what you
mean.”
“He’s strong.”
“Very, very strong, I’d say.”
“Great.” Geneva sighs again. “Anymore good news?”
They come to a halt a few feet away
from the rows of cars trapped on the bridge, and Ms. Olivia’s lips grow
thin. “Only that we can’t go any further
by car.”
“That’s fine,” Geneva says,
conjuring her armor. She opens the car
door.
“Ms. Oaks, where are you going?”
“To kill the monster. That is my job now, remember?”
“But, how will you find it?”
“Shouldn’t be too hard, right? Just have to look for the giant green guy wrecking
the city.”
Ms. Olivia considers it for a moment
and then nods, reluctantly. “Fine, you
go on ahead. Your armor will protect you
from the cold and grant you greater speed than you would normally have.”
“I know,” Geneva says, stepping out
of the car. The snow is already deep
enough to leave footprints and only growing deeper as more falls.
“Mind your wand.”
Geneva looks back. “You mean sword. Or swand?
Did we ever settle on one?
Anyway, stab it. Got you.”
“Yes,” Ms. Olivia says and, before
Geneva can close the door, “Geneva!”
Holding the door, Geneva peeks back
inside. “Yes?”
“Be careful.”
Geneva laughs nervously. “Kind of a silly think to say when you’re
sending someone into battle, don’t you think?”
She closes the door and runs off, weaving between cars on the way.
-The
Knights of Sheba-
A car goes flying in a low arc,
hitting the ground hard and bending under its own weight. It slides to a stop and falls onto its
hood. Glass spills out around it like
glittering drops of blood, and Andromalius stomps passed, growling at his
surroundings.
The world is blinding with light and
noise. Even here, with the elven
partitions, the abandoned streets seem full of life. The sky shines in refraction. Travel between worlds had been disorienting,
but it is nothing compared to the burning skyline of the human realm.
He stops in the empty streets and
stares at the sky, watching the snow fall.
There are no soldiers here and no leaders, simply tiny men and women
running for their lives. They are soft
things, not worthy of his attention.
There is nothing.
“Now, that’s just not nice,” he
hears, and he turns to find Geneva behind him.
She stands near the end of the street, clad in white armor with beige
weave, her hips cocked to one side. She
is nearly four feet shorter than him and much lighter.
He snorts. “I came hearing stories
of the return of the knights, the demon slayers of lore. And all I find is a world sick with light and
noise, and a tiny human infant playing at hero.”
Geneva stares at him for a long
moment, her right hand on her hip. After
some consideration, she says, “Infant?
That’s not nice, either. Or even
remotely accurate. I mean, I have a
little baby fat.” She pinches her
stomach through the weave. “Still, guess
I can’t imagine manners from someone who comes storming into the city, stomping
around, breaking stuff, going all ‘take me to your leader.’”
“I did not come for a leader. I came to issue warning. Our world is open, and I won’t have your kind
invading. My lands will be protected.”
“So, you propose to stop war by
starting a war.”
“This is no war. It is a warning. I will break you, make you an example, and
then the worlds will know. And they will
fear Andromalius, the knight slayer!”
“Sorry to tell you, but I don’t
think breaking me will be nearly as impressive as you think.”
“Do all humans talk so much?”
“Nah. I’m special.”
Andromalius roars and charges like a
bull, head down, shoulders forward.
Geneva tumbles out of the way and rolls to a stop beside a car. He slides to a halt in the snow and turns on
her, bringing his meaty first down toward her head. She side-steps, avoiding the attack and
leaving him to drive his fist clean through the windshield of the car.
Geneva sprints away, putting fifteen
feet between them before coming to a stop.
She turns to him, hands on her hips, and says, “Listen, all joking
aside. We really don’t have to
fight. If you give up now, I promise
I’ll get you amnesty or whatever it’s called.
You’ve just got to pinky swear.”
Andromalius yanks his arm free in an
explosion of glass and seems no worse for it.
He glares. “You think I should be
afraid of you, when all you have done is retreat?”
“No, not afraid. Not exactly.
Just, I don’t know, reasonable? I
mean, is that really so much to ask?”
Animals, when angry or ready to
fight, swell. Andromalius does,
too. His muscles tighten in a display of
supremacy. Already, he towered over her,
but now he does it with purpose. “As a
child I heard stories of human soldiers wearing magical armor, who,
single-handedly, turned the tide of the war, who met our soldiers on the field
and cut terror into their flesh. I come here seeking the myth, and instead I
get you.”
“So, I am taking that as a no?”
“You are all talk,” Andromalius
says. “A disappointment. A lie.
But you will not be worth nothing.
I’ve told you—you will be an example.”
Geneva sighs. “Right, right, give me a second then.” She reaches back and unstheaths her wand with
one smooth motion. As it forms, she
levels it at him, and she gathers all of her courage. Even at a distance, she feels like she is
staring up into his eyes. “Last
time. Stop now.”
“I will not be intimidated by a
child.”
“Is the child thing really
necessary?”
Andromalius yanks the door off of
the nearby car and tests its weight.
Then, he hurls it at her overhand.
She sidesteps it and watches it bounce along the street before crashing
through the storefront window of a nearby shop.
By the time she turns, Andromalius
is there. He barrels through her,
hitting with his shoulder and knocking her to the ground. When she lands, her wand slides across the
street, coming to a stop underneath a parked car. She rolls onto her stomach and plans to go
for it when Andromalius takes her by the leg and tosses her in the opposite
direction.
A brick wall stops her, cracking
underneath the force of her landing. She
slides to the ground, dazed and breathless.
He leaps, landing just in front of her, and brings his fist down as he does. She rolls away at the last minute, coming to
a stop face down in the snow, and while she doesn’t see the blow land, the
sound of cracking stone gives her a solid indication of the result.
Before he can close in, she shuffles
to her feet and stumbles away. She hears
him stomping after her and knows that escape is impossible. So, she turns on him and sinks into her best
boxing pose. She tries to draw on her training, which focused primarily on
blade work. Suddenly, she feels entirely
unprepared.
“You sure we can’t talk this out?”
“We have talked enough,” he screams,
stepping into range. For his size, he
moves very quickly. His fist is a blur,
moving too fast for her to follow, and strikes her in the chest before she can
even blink. The second punch leaves her
staggered, but the armor protects her.
She throws her right arm up to catch
a third swing, but it lands with devastating force. It knocks her sideways, into a nearby
building, where she braces against the wall for balance. Her head spins, and another hammer-like
strike sends her to her knees.
He stands over her, sneering in
disappointment, his fists bleeding.
Geneva is on her hands and knees, panting and trying hard not to
cry. Her entire body aches, and the last
blow left her helmet cracked.
“It seems you’re no longer so intent
on talking,” Andromalius says.
“Funny, seems like you are.” Geneva jumps up and kicks him, hard, in the
shin before running away. Androamlius
stumbles back and screams before giving chase.
She sprints as hard as she can
through the snow, dropping down a few feet away and sliding the remaining
distance to the car. She has to grab a
wheel to stop herself as she slides under.
Her fingers brush against her wand just as he grabs her by the shoulder
and lifts her up. He crushes her between
his two enormous hands, and she flails and struggles for breath.
“So, this is a knight. A petty thing, using petty tactics. Weren’t you taught how to fight?”
“Apparently,” she coughs, “not.”
“Disappointing,” he says. “I was expecting a challenge, but still,
glory is glory.”
With all of his weight and strength,
he slams her down onto the car beneath her.
The hood bends and twists, the frame groans under the impact. The last thing Geneva remembers before
passing out is the windshield rupturing, raining down on her, the shards
catching the light of the lamps and casting little circular rainbows across her
body.
-The
Knights of Sheba-
Nina was never one to wait and can’t
wait this time, either. So, not long
after Geneva leaves, she follows. Gun in
hand, she runs through the streets, ignoring the bite of the cold or the chill
of the snow melting upon her exposed flesh.
She imagines Geneva caught in battle against an unstoppable enemy and
knows who it was who put her there.
The storm reaches apex. The snow is heavy and streets clogged with
exhaust and cars as she approaches the roadblock. There, she finds elven soldiers dressed in
police uniforms. Upon arrival, she hears
a few elves warding people off with imaginary threats. They are working for now, but Nina can feel
the growing agitation in the cold air.
She slips past the roadblock and
pushes ahead toward the danger when she gets a call from Erak. “Sir?”
“I hear your girl is out there. Congratulations. Looks like she’s finally grown up.”
“Yes, sir. Thank you.”
“Where are you right now,
Lieutenant?”
“On my way to offer support, sir.”
“Don’t.”
Nina stops, her gun clutched tightly
in her cold hand. “Excuse me, sir, but
could you repeat that?”
“Don’t support her.”
“But, sir…”
“You’ve been training her, haven’t
you?”
“Yes, but…”
“Then she shouldn’t need your help,
should she?”
Nina pauses, stares ahead. She can see downtown through a haze of snow
and shadows. “But, sir, this is no
ordinary demon.”
“And she’s no ordinary girl. Or so you say. Listen, this is her job. Her only job.
It’s the entire reason we’ve allowed you to play this little game of
yours.”
“But if it is a demon noble…”
“All the more reason to hold you in
reserve. The knights were founded
specifically to deal with the corrupt bastards of the demons’ so-called high
lineage. Anyhow, you’re of better use to
me at the blockade. I hear the humans
are getting restless.”
Nina looks back. She can see rows of lights gathered, each
blinding in intensity. She can hear
honks from the cars in the back and see shadows moving. “Yes, sir.
I can imagine, but what if she fails?”
“If she fails, we step in. Until then, you’ll just have to believe in
her.” He pauses. “You do believe in her, don’t you?”
Nina hesitates. She imagines the sixteen-year-old girl
flailing with a wooden sword and takes a deep breath. Then, she remembers the sixteen-year-old girl
who led a demon away from someone else to keep them safe. “Yes, sir.
Of course, I do.”
“Then follow orders and get back to
the blockade. You know how to talk to
humans.”
“Yes, sir.” Nina hangs up and stares back at the city and
truly believes in Geneva. She just hopes
belief is enough.
-The
Knights of Sheba-
Geneva slides from the hood like an
afterthought, landing face first in the snow and remaining there. She feels battered, perhaps even broken, but
Ms. Olivia is in her head, talking to her, ordering her to wake up and, more
importantly, to move.
Andromalius stands over her, hands
fixed on the front end of the car. It
groans as he lifts it into the air, and Geneva watches through the helm’s lenses
as his blurry form strains to keep it aloft, preparing to drop it on her. In her periphery, she sees the wand gleam
under the glow of a nearby streetlights.
Again, Ms. Olivia is there, ordering
her to reach out, to grab it. The car
obscures the light now and casts a long shadow.
Geneva holds her breath and waits for the end to come. Instead, she hears a harmless clatter.
She opens her eyes and finds an
arrow in the snow. Andromalius looks off
to the side at someone holding a bow.
“Elves,” Geneva whispers to herself, and then she remembers that the
elves use guns.
Another arrow sails in. It hits Andromalius across the chest and
bounces off. Grunting, the demon tosses the car aside and turns away from
Geneva, a sneer written across his large, angular features.
“Who?” Geneva moves her head slowly,
shuffling in the snow to catch sight of her mysterious ally. It is no elf, but Claude, standing there, bow
ready, his jacket fluttering in the hard, cold wind. He has another arrow nocked and ready to
fire, and from what Geneva can see, he is whispering to it.
Andromalius barks or laughs, Geneva
can’t really tell. She turns away and crawls
toward her wand, hoping to reach it before her enemy notices. That is when she hears an explosion. It is just behind her and leaves her ears
ringing. She can feel Andromalius’ big
frame moving staggering in its wake.
Taking this as her cue, Geneva
snatches her wand. She pulls it in close
and curls into a little ball.
Immediately behind her, Andromalius settles in the snow and glares at
Claude, who has another arrow ready.
Another explosion and this time Geneva sees its origin. Each arrow fired explodes with a blinding,
roaring flame.
As terrifying as the display is,
each time the smoke clears there is little damage done. The surface of Andormalius’ skin is slightly
charred but more than anything it only seems to leave him angry. He snarls and charges at Claude, who keeps
drawing arrows, keeps whispering, and keeps firing.
Geneva groans. “Maybe those arrows won’t work, but I’m sure
this can.” Geneva stands. Her legs
quiver under her weight. She calls to Andromalius,
who stops and turns to regard her dismissively, and she levels her wand at
him. “Hey, guess what, ugly. It’s two on one now.”
Andromalius snorts and looks between
him. Again, he barks, and his massive
body shaking. “Yes. Two. Even more for me to kill.” He sobers and glares at her. “An entire army wouldn’t save you, child.”
“Man, you’re really starting to piss
me off.” Geneva takes a deep breath,
tests her footing, and then charges. She
means to attack in some way but doesn’t have a plan ready by the time they
meet. So, he slams his open palm into
her gut with enough force to throw her into a distant stoop and leaves her
tumbling down onto the sidewalk.
Claude fires and Andromalius swats
the arrow out of the sky. It explodes
against his hand and, as the smoke clears, Andromalius marches through it. He glares at Claude and, in his coarse, demon
language, shouts, “I must admit, I am curious, human. How is it that you make your arrows burn? Are you, too, blessed by your gods or is this
some other power I do not know?”
Claude retreats while readying
another arrow.
“Can you not hear me, or has your
fear rendered you mute?”
Claude lifts his bow and aims, and
Andromalius roars and closes distance.
Rather than taking the head shot, Claude lowers the bow and fires into
the demon’s gut. The arrow explodes with
enough force to stagger Claude and with enough light to blind him. Andromalius, meanwhile, swings wide and
catches Claude across the side. It snaps
Claude’s bow and arm simultaneously
Afterward, Andromalius takes Claude
by the chest and holds him against the alley wall. He lifts Claude head, holding it again the cold
bricks. Claude pants and bleeds. His
vision blurs, but he makes an effort to stare Androamlius in the eyes.
“Once, humanity fought us in a great
war, but this is no war, is it? No, it
is simply execution. Thousands of years,
a lifetime of stories, and this is what I find?
Disappointment doesn’t begin to explain my feelings.”
“Hey,” Geneva shouts, stumbling to
her feet. She uses a nearby lamppost to
keep steady as she leans down to grab her wand.
It feels heavier than she remembers.
“I think he may be a bit distracted, what with the busted arm, but if
you want, I can keep you entertained for a bit.
Want to have a chat? Maybe we can
talk about the weather? Or politics?
Maybe you can tell me what it’s like to be a big, green outsider in a
tiny human world.”
Andromalius frowns and drops Claude
like a broken toy. “It is annoying,” he
says, turning. “I keep swatting you
down, and you keep getting back up.”
“Yeah.” Geneva staggers forward on legs that feel
like jelly. “My sister says I’m like
herpes; itchy, red, and you just can’t get rid of me.”
Andromalius looks down at Claude,
who nurses his damaged arm. “Wait here,
little man, I will return for you shortly.”
“Ah, no, you won’t,” Geneva says,
lifting her wand and trying hard not to shake.
She fails. “Because, I plan to
end this once and for all.” She hopes
that sounds more impressive to him than it did to her.
Time stands still as they eye each
other. Snow drifts between them, carried
by uncaring, unfeeling winds. Geneva
feels unsteady but still considers herself in the battle. At the very least, she seems better off than
her archer friend. Simply looking at his
arm makes her skin crawl.
Then, they move. As if on cue, they charge each other. Andromalius stomps forward, using his momentum
and weight to his advantage. Once close,
Geneva plants her feet with both hand and braces the hilt of her wand against
her leg, and then winces.
First, she feels pain. They collide with enough force that the
wand’s hilt cracks her armor. The blade
digs into Andormalius’ side, leaving him momentarily shocked as he regards the
wound with short-lived respect.
Then, he scoops her up and tosses
her in a fit of rage. She lands beside
Claude, collapsing a few trashcans on impact, while Andromalius roars and pulls
the wand from his flesh. He examines the
blade, his blood on it, before feeling his side. Blood flows through his fingers. He stares at them next before dropping the
wand in the snow.
“And here I thought all humans were
weak.” He looks up to find Geneva,
face-up on a wrinkled trashcan. “And
already you disappoint me again.”
“No, no disappointment,” Geneva
says, pushing herself up, onto her feet.
“Just new to this. Give me a
second.” She uses the wall to keep
herself steady as she moves to Claude’s side and kneels. “Hey, uh, guy. You okay?”
“I’m,” he struggles to focus on her,
stares into her helm but not into her eyes.
His arm is bleeding, and Geneva can see bone protruding. “I’m sorry, I can’t fight.”
“Figured as much,” she says,
regarding his splintered bow. “Can you
still do the arrow thing?”
“What?”
“You know, how you make the arrows
go ‘boom.’”
“I can, but…”
“Great, and about how long till they
go off?”
“A few seconds…”
Geneva pulls an arrow from the snow
where his quiver had emptied and hands it to him. “Then gambit this thing up for me.”
Claude regards the arrow curiously
for a moment before taking it into his good hand. “How will we fire it at him?”
“Trust me, I’ve got plans.” She watches him hesitate and then whisper
into the arrow. Then, he returns it with
a warning to hurry. Geneva nods and turns, and she takes off in a sprint,
pushing herself harder now than she ever has before and helped a great deal by
her armor.
“Again? This game grows tedious!” When they meet, it
is a dance. Andromalius swings high,
just above her head, and Geneva lunges, ineffectually, at his side. They stumble together, and she finds another
opening and tries hard to drive the arrow into his wound, but he catches her.
Lifting her by the shoulder, he smiles.
“Clever,” he says, eying the arrow
as he holds her. “But ultimately
futile. I am meant for war, human. My skin is far too hard for something like
steel to harm me.”
“Figured,” Geneva says, and she
drives the arrow into his eye just before it explodes.
The force of the
explosion throws Geneva into a nearby streetlamp, bowing it around her before
she falls forward into the sidewalk
As the smoke clears, it reveals
Andromalius’ enormous body, crowned by a ruptured skull. He sways, briefly, and then falls. Fragments of him lie scattered, red in the
snow.
Cradling his arm, Claude stumbles
over to Geneva, who rests hunched, snow gathering on her armor. He settles beside her, wet with snow and
blood, half afraid to touch her. After a
few seconds, she jerks up and looks around.
The right lens of her helm is fractured into a tiny web-work of
cracks. “Huh, what, huh,” she looks at
Andromalius body, and then at the splatter of blood across her body. “Okay, ew.”
“You’re okay.” Claude sighs and settles.
“Yeah, and so are you.” Geneva reaches up and feels along her helm.
Its pieces rearrange, sliding open, allowing her to pull it off. The cold air
feels good on her face, bracing, but the smell makes her recoil. She clutches her nose. “Okay, mistake.”
Claude laughs weakly and looks her
over. “Who are you?”
“Geneva,” she says, extended her
armored, soot blackened hand. She looks
down at Claude’s hand, which rests limply on his thigh. “Ah.
Sorry.”
“Don’t be,” he says. “I think you saved my life.”
“Don’t worry about it,” she
says. She stares at Andromalius’ body
and sighs. “Now, the hard part.”
Claude looks at it, too. He can see the blood gathering in the snow,
see the fresh snow gathering in the blood.
“What’s the hard part?”
“How do we tell them that we won?”
The Knights of
Sheba 109 A…End
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