Volume 4: Dereliction of Duty
Chapter XII: Dereliction of Duty
Some minutes later Sarah peeked out from around her coat, emboldened by the barking dog's sudden quietness and the fact that her left leg had gone numb from being stuffed in the workbench's cubby. Hardly dignified, but she'd have gone unnoticed, surely. Once she was sure there was no one around she stood painfully, bracing her hand against the workbench and renewing her search for a tool suitable for cutting into the flooring.
After a moment she gave up and strode over to the hole she'd made, crouching down she eyed the huge mastiff who was still attending the door, prancing left and right in anticipation someone would dare break in. All it would take was a moment to rot the wood enough to get what she was after, but for the dog any excuse would be more than enough to send it off the deep end.
She bit her lower lip looking between the hole and the dog, then the little trim saw. There was a time for ingenuity and then there was a time to be quick- like ripping off a scab. Gods was-
Movement stirred in her peripheral vision. She pitched to the side grabbing for her flintlock by instinct but the moment she saw more of the figure she understood the futility. Standing there in the inky gloom was her Cherub. The perfect, porcelain visage of a deity's servant was dressed in an odd three piece suit, mirror polished shoes and black gloves staring at her with white, pupil-less eyes as cold as the master they both served. Sarah exhaled a sigh of relief and irritation.
Then horror as she realized what was going to happen.
In the space of an instant Sarah imagined the dog turning on them upon sensing the new presence and- more importantly- the magic she carried with her. He'd turn to defend his master's property and probably attack whomever he saw, and since only Sarah could see her Cherub, she was the most likely target.
What happened wasn't much different than what she imagined. Chac turned, teeth bared and his ire focused immediately upon where the Cherub was standing. Sarah shuffled back away from the dog as it started to plod toward it. For her part in it, the creature actually raised her brows and edged away calmly. To Sarah the sound of her shoes
click clack
ing against the floorboards was actually kind of reassuring; it was the only time she'd ever seen the 'woman' uneasy about something.
Not one to waste an opportunity, the redheaded half-elf eased towards her stash. She eyed the Cherub who seemed rather intently focused on the Mawik bred killing machine striding towards her, sniffing the air and trying to pinpoint the 'threat.'
What little Sarah knew about the Mawik plains, and by extension their people, said that even the land itself seemed to reject the gods- everything had evolved some form of sensitivity to magic and an innate distrust of magic. Even the legendary sunless steel they produced could supposedly damage and even kill divine creatures. It seemed the tales she heard weren't that far off. . .
"What are you doing?" The Cherub asked rather indignantly as she backed up. She made a vapid shooing motion at the dog who followed her hand's arc with his muzzle. The fear she was showing made Sarah wonder if the dog could actually hurt her- and by extension Sarah- or if she was just uneasy. "Go away."
There was no sense in waiting around to find out, Sarah decided as the mastiff closed in on his prey. She slid her fingers into the hole and opened the channels in her body to let her 'gift' flow through. In seconds the floorboards began to dry and turn to a dull ashen grey that flaked off under the pressure of her palm. Moments after that the sub flooring gave way to a similar fate. Tendrils of rot crept out from around the hole like the roots of a tree, chewing through the wood easily and already starting to creature new fractures. Once Sarah was sure she had plenty of room to free her treasure she closed herself off and shook feeling back into her hand.
The Cherub was circling back towards her at a slight angle that would ensure Chac passed by Sarah as they moved. Sarah gave the creature a dirty look as she reached into the hole and dug at the dirt as quickly as she could. Only a few feet away the dog stopped, sniffed the air and settled his gaze on Sarah.
"Co- come now, don't give me that look." She sputtered a little, digging into the dirt all the faster now with both hands. "Don't do anything I'm going to regret. . ." The hard dirt scraped her sensitive flesh like gravel as she worked it faster. For every step he made towards her she only found an inch of purchase in the soil. There was no way she'd get what she needed fast enough. . . "A little help would be appreciated!"
"Why would I help someone who's forgotten their basic duty? You were supposed to give that boy a reason to believe in-"
"Do be realistic!" Sarah already had her lie spun up, plausible and perfectly executed in her mind. "You see what I'm dealing with here, don't you?" The dog stopped, looked between the Cherub and Sarah, confused by the presences. "Maybe you missed that part of my memory when you co-opted me, but Mawik animals despise magic in all its forms!"
The Cherub took a half step back. Sarah smiled inwardly. Unless she was killed by the dog, she'd live another day. . . As she dug feverishly into the soil her fingers scraped the top of a familiar glass container. She almost exclaimed but before she could even celebrate internally the dog lunged at her.
With all the grace of a cat tumbling downhill in a barrel the cleric rolled on to her back and brought her pistol up width-wise so the wood caught in his mouth. She barred her feet against his shoulders and shoved both hands against the pistol. The powerful creature barked furiously around the weapon baring down on her, snapping, shoving off against the rotting wood to attack his prey.
Sarah did the only thing she could do; she whimpered and whined like a bitch and shoved the flat of her gun into the maw of that powerful beast to keep it from finding her throat. She knew better than to look to her Cherub for help but she still tried- unsurprisingly the creature was trying to keep distance from the whole affair.
Divine servant indeed.
Chac shoved down on her so hard her elbows slammed into the ground and she almost lost hold of the pistol. He yanked back against the weapon and thrashed his head back and forth, ripping it from her hands and sending it sailing across the room. Sarah watched in horror as the weapon clattered to the ground but she had no time to let it sink in before the dog was aiming for her throat.
The half-elf pitched her weight to the side by reflex, tiling her head down to protect the vitals as she grabbed his muzzle with both hands. Teeth. Powerful jaws. She could kill him. . .
Sarah kicked her foot under her flank. Pushed up only to have him shove her back down with his fore paw. How could she have been so stupid? She hadn't survived slavery and twenty years on the run for this, had she? She wanted to
live
.
She deserved to live.
"Kill it!" The Cherub shouted.
"Ngh!" Sarah whimpered. She pushed up again only to be slammed back down. The dog thrashed again breaking out of Sarah's feeble grip. He dived for her face.
It was a strange notion, but three decades of rolling around in one bed or another flashed through her mind in an instant and an idea formed between the time it took her to get her leg wrapped around his back and her hands under his throat. She pushed off the leverage she had and used her other leg to pull the dogs' towards his body sending him slightly off balance. Fear punched into her throat when he lashed out at her trying to find something to bite but her adrenaline surged with every passing second she became more aware of herself in relation to him and she wrestled against his leverage.
Her hand wrapped around his throat and pushing his head back, she pushed his weight to the side with her thighs. They turned and fought more until she had him facing away from her and her weight pinning him down against the floor. Panting heavily and trembling like a leaf she looked to her Cherub and, through sweat stung eyes, she eyed her. "You. . . .are quite bothersome."
For her part in it, the Cherub crossed her arms over her well tailored suit and just stared at her as the dog thrashed in Sarah's arms. Eventually she deemed her cleric worthy of a vague shrug and a small 'hmph.'
Sarah tightened her grip on the dog trying for a reassuring coo that came out far more pained than she meant it to. "Normally, I'd love nothing more than to spend quality time wrapped around you, but I really do need to be going." To her Cherub, she said: "Be so kind as to fetch my-"
"That's not how this works, Sarah."
"Oh! Well then allow me to let our friend here go and we can pontificate endlessly on division of labor!" Sarah grunted when the dog thrashed again.
The Cherub, unfazed, stared at her indifferently. "You don't keep your end of our bargain- you don't serve your god. Why should that god now grant you-"
"Come off it," Sarah cut her off. "I've had quite enough to deal with in the past few days that my patience is quite sincerely at its limit!"
"You were supposed to show that boy the power of the Engineer, you were supposed to display a miracle for him. . . You were supposed to bring him into prayer."
"If you've not been paying attention, there is a dog here!" She push back when he tried to free himself again. "A Mawik one at that!"
"That is not my problem."
"My death will be! Or have you forgotten?"
The Cherub stiffened a little. Sarah wasn't supposed to know about that little nuance in their Pact. "I will be remade. You won't."
"Spare me!" Sarah grumbled as she briefly considered using an actual blessing to disable her would be killer. It had been decades since she'd done anything like it and the notion felt absurd, almost blasphemous to even consider- irony in motion. "Now
please
be so kind as to-"
"No."
Sarah chuffed and in her most heavily accented sphinx said, "You're a bitch, you know that?"
A dry smile was all she earned in response.
"Fine, I'll let him go," Sarah lied. The Cherub wouldn't know it was a lie but if she was so damn proud she could guess at Sarah's buff.
At first the Cherub didn't react but when Sarah started to draw back her weight from the dog she backed up a step and actually started to turn away as if she'd be able to run right through the wall. Maybe it had something to do with how they interacted with the real world- Sarah noted it, secured the dog once more and waited until the Cherub was a few feet distant before she reached for the hole in the floor again.