And now for something completely different...
Hey there, this is a bit of random fantasy based on the Elderscrolls games put out by Bethesda. So yes, most of it, excepting the bits I messed with and made up, is the intellectual property of the fine people at Bethesda. Bethesda you're the bomb, please don't sue me or anything. ^^
On another note, if you're a 'Fire' reader, this may or may not be your cup of tea. Considered yourself fairly warned, but you never know until you try. This also isn't a 'quicky', if you catch me, so be warned there as well.
Other wise, have fun! Or criticize me brutally, whatever turns your twisted crank. ^^
-enithermon
*********
A tiny drop of sweat coalesced somewhere under leather bindings and began to move, sliding in a halting zigzag along a pronounced collarbone. It shifted, collecting momentum, snowballing its way along the tendons of the throat, down over the chin, skirting the ear and tightly pulled wine coloured hair. It rested briefly at the inward curve of the temple, a shimmering stalactite reflecting ash grey skin and the cool blue glow of the ruin's ancient mana soaked walls. Long, leather bound legs tensed around a fallen ornamental column of smooth white stone, and slim dark fingers flinched against the taunt bow string, running a wave of tension through the dangling inverted body.
The tiny drop shivered, trembled, fluxed, and dropped. Blood red eyes watched the drop fall, a tiny blue star, and followed it with the glinting head of a steel arrow. The drop hit the mark's back, and the gray skinned ogre reared its head up to its source. It opened its razor toothed maw to release a terrible roar as it sighted its prey, his yellow eyes flashing ferociously. He let out a gurgling sound instead as the arrow pierced the soft flesh of his throat, and another as a second pierced the yellow glare of his left eye driving him to his knees and rending the soft tissue of his small brain.
Inanna nocked another arrow and waited. There had been three of these guar-brained monstrosities in the great hall, and if one had scented her, it was likely the others had too. She thought of all the curses she knew in every language she could think of to pass the time and draw her mind from the ache in her thighs and the blood slowly pooling at the top of her brain. Lucky for her she had a heart like a wild boar's and it pounded away, fighting gravity to keep her legs from growing numb. When she finished her list, and there was still no sign or sound that even her hunter's ears could pick up, she descended, dropping with a soft pat barely louder than her falling bead of sweat had made.
She salvaged what she could of her arrows, the one through the eye coming out easily. She managed to get a shallow one out of the shoulder as well. It was a lousy shot. She'd been aiming for the throat, but she consoled herself with the defense that she'd been running backwards over rubble at the time. She'd stupidly aimed the first two at the heart forgetting that the muscle there was so thick and hard even an Orc probably couldn't get a sword all the way in there. These creatures were a minimum of eight feet tall and practically as thick as tree trunks, and those were the runts. Ogre's were never armed, but they didn't need to be. If one of those fists ever got a grip on you it would snap you in half like a piece of stale bread, and a solid blow would turn your insides to scrib-jelly.
She wasn't even going to try to get the arrow out of his throat. She'd probably shred her wrist on his teeth getting it out. She cocked her head at the creature as she crouched over it, wiping her arrow heads off on its dirty loin cloth. The teeth would be worth something, she knew of alchemists who used them, but loosening them might take too much time.
She licked her lips and glanced at the entry to the grand hall. From somewhere inside came a long huffing howl. It was unsettling, but not worrisome. She'd hunted these things enough to know that it wasn't a sound of agitation. It did remind her that she didn't have leisure hours to sit around pulling teeth, and that it wasn't beasts she was hunting today.
She patted her rucksack to make sure nothing had shifted unduly during her little acrobatic display. The nimbleness was a relatively new skill, she used to be a hunter among her people, strong and fast. Home to her was a brutal and barren waste that made the body hard and the mind sharp, that or it killed you. Living in the shadow of the red mountain was a trial of will, and her tribe endured it enthusiastically. Her new career wasn't nearly so brutal or honourable.
Really, it wasn't more than that of a glorified thief. The skills she'd learned as an Ashlander came in handy, but sometimes the situation, such as this one, called for slyness and a certain level of flexibility, both of which had been hard won skills born of necessity. She was Dunmer, the dark-skinned mer, and like most Dunmer was a skilled and natural death dealer, but when a thousand gold pieces are at issue, and you're working on a deadline, 'run away' quickly becomes a valid and practical option. She had what she came for and after several hours of hard and dangerous labour in the labyrinth of the ruins, now she just needed to tuck tail and get out before anything else decided to waylay her.
She took one last look at the hulking nine foot mass and took off at a light sprint. She'd come in this way and killed anything that might stop her already, so no need to maintain the any semblance of stealth. She lept up the steps to the exit, three at a time. The blood rushed through her legs satisfactorily and she slowed only as she approached the door. Time for stealth again, one never knew what would decide to make camp in the surface ruins. She could only hope the minotaur carcass she'd left on the doorstep would be discouragement enough while she got through with her business. The door opened up into a spiralling staircase and she immediately heard a voice.
"Bloody murder" she whispered under her breathe, stepping over the minotaur, instinctively double checking that it was really and truly dead. This was the irritating part where she had to decide to stick her neck out or shoot first and ask questions later. Sometimes she preferred the ogres. There was no question about what they would do to her if she said good day. These folk could be friendlies, and she really didn't like shooting friendlies, but they just as easily could be something else.
She couldn't quite make out everything they were saying but she caught the words, "tracks," "the beast...this way," and "in the ruins," and decided they were probably hunters. She held her bow up so the tip would be visible as she rounded the stairs, and be the first thing shot at if anyone had an itchy finger. No shots so far, that was a good thing. A couple second later she was pulling herself onto a crumbling pillar base and waving jauntily, bow still in hand. Somewhere far off to the left and out of sight a cry of alarm sounded.
That's when the shots started. Luckily she'd seen the man off and ahead to the right reach for his arrow and was already making for higher ground when it sliced through the air where her chest would have been. Her arrow was already in flight before his landed and caught him in the right shoulder, a decent enough shot to put him out of commission as a bow man. She couldn't see his face, but the names he was calling her told her it was a fellow Dunmer.
She grinned and swung her bow as she pulled another arrow and released it into the chest of a noisy Nord woman charging her from behind with a rather frightening looking battle axe swung over her head. Unfortunately she was wearing a plated chest piece and the arrow did little more than slow her charge. Which suited Inanna well enough because it gave her the extra second she needed to get a clear aim at her face, and get her bow pulled that much tighter for her second shot. She released just as the woman was close enough to split Inanna like a log and the pale fierce blue of her eyes was visible in the thumb thick gap in her visor.
A thumb's width was wide enough and the Nord and her axe clattered backwards into the debris of the ruins before she got the chance. The noise was satisfying, but it also dulled her ears to a third assailant coming from her right who she caught out of the corner of her eye at the last possible second. She was able to avoid the blow of the sword, but it nicked her bow, sending it sliding out of her hand and skidding over a wall and onto a lower level of the ruins. It also knocked her off balance and put her on the ground.