Palla ran, tearing through the brush with the baying of hounds behind her. It had felt so freeing when she smashed through the window and over the wall, but the reality of a death as a chew toy was quickly approaching and all she could think to do was keep her short, goblin legs moving beneath her, keep her face forward since there was nothing to be gained looking back. The forest floor was littered with traps for a goblin who had never before walked on a surface other than floor, roots that stuck out to trap an unwary foot, branches that smacked her in the face, tangles that threatened to immobilize her entirely and allow the hounds to tear her apart as soon as she was found. The outside world was so green, so beautiful, if only the joy of her first time seeing it weren't covered up by the panic of incipient doom, she knew that this world would have been so much better to grow up in than the hole she was offered.
Sometimes, her customers would talk to her, and they didn't really think that she could understand them. Some of them she didn't even bite, they seemed like they only wanted to see someone who had things worse than they did, someone to burden with their secret worries. Some said that when you died, you got to come back again as something else. Palla hoped for anything else.
Maybe a barnacle. They mentioned the possibility like it was a fate worse than death, but she'd never seen the sea, so being stuck to the side of a ship didn't sound like such a bad deal. Apparently they were just goop in a shell or something. That would be better, nobody cared enough about goop to hurt it.
She came to a road through the forest and quickened her pace, pounding her bare feet on the dirt, taking as much of a headstart as she could while her pursuers were still rustling through the brush. She barely saw the leg until she'd already run headfirst into it. And Palla reared up, ready to skitter up the armored man and claw at whatever she could reach... and she stopped in her tracks.
The dogs and the men chasing her came to a stop, hounds held at bay, baying for her green flesh. One man called out as he approached, "Pelk! Why, it's not end of the month yet but aren't I glad to see you. Go ahead and grab that one, the master's got plans for her."
Pelk, the knight who had spent tearful days with Palla underground, slowly went to his knee and put a gauntleted hand softly on her shoulder. He felt so different, conviction hardening his features and his gaze firm. He said, so quietly only Palla's pointed ear could hear, "You're hurt. I'm sorry it's taken this long, but I'm here." Then he reached back and drew his cape from his back, draping it like a long dress over Palla's shaking form, blood weeping from many thin, stinging glass cuts. "Go farther up the road, we'll have somebody patch you up. And I'd rather you didn't see the rest of this."
"Hey? Pelk, she doesn't need clothes, just hand her over." One of the pursuers reached out to take hold of her.
-
Pelk pushed the trembling goblin girl out of the way and lopped her attacker's arm off at the shoulder with a flash of blessed steel. "Go now!" he cried and squared off against the remainder of those set against him, smiling when he heard the scuff of little footsteps behind him. The rest of the party would see to her safety; he had insisted on being the point of their attack.
The confusion of his one-time comrades made him grin, how he'd hated their guts during the entire term of his assignment. The one who'd lost his right arm shrieked, delicious bafflement on his face as he groped for the dagger on his right hip with his left hand. He wouldn't have long to wonder what was happening, the angels would certainly inform him of his demise after his head finished falling to the ground.
Pelk flicked the blood from the tip of his blade and glowered at the remaining three men, the two dogs barking with bared teeth and spittle flying. He didn't much care for the killing of dogs; they were only being used as tools of the wicked, not culpable for the horrors their masters inflicted on others. Yet still, he strode forth with vengeance in his heart and the hope that the dogs would forgive him in the afterlife, once the innocent were sifted from the guilty to be processed today.
They were loosed by their handlers, and they were defeated in two wide swings as they lunged for Pelk's neck. He had no time to feel guilt as the masters came at him themselves in the wake of their dogs' attacks, short blades drawn to hopefully deal the final blow to a supposedly immobilized opponent. These two wore no armor, brought no real weapons; they had intended to go out and make sport of a small woman. Pelk would have no guilt to feel after chopping halfway through one's guts, leaving him to bleed out in the dirt, and spearing the other through the chest.
The last man fled. An arrow sailed from behind, shearing the air beside Pelk's ear, and pierced him through the neck. He made it two extra steps on the strength of balance and inertia before crumpling to the ground, either dead or paralyzed, soon to die.
"Can't let them warn the main house, can we?" Almine passed by, going to the most recently killed man to retrieve her arrow.
Pelk craned his head back a touch to hear the reassuring rhythmic thud of twenty dwarfs marching. "At this point, I doubt there is anything they could do to stop this if they
did
know we were on our way."
"Hostages?" Almine asked. "Anyway, you know these guys. Anybody you don't want dead, while we have the chance to talk?"
They began walking down the road, slowing their pace so that they would eventually allow the dwarfs to catch up. "Try not to kill the servants who don't fight back, most of them have their minds messed with so they won't reveal what's going on out here. And if you see anyone in church garments, I want them for myself, understand?"
The half-elf nodded gravely, drawing her hood over her pretty face. "Wouldn't dream of taking that from you, boy. Don't forget, you're not the only one going out for vengeance at this point."
The dwarfs were coming into sight as he waited to respond. "The church has had me protecting this fat bastard for years... don't I know that vengeance is coming my way, too. It will have to wait until I'm the last one in line."
-
Lappy heard the hounds loosed outside the walls from inside the harem building. The rest of the so-called wives had to have heard it too, or else why were they all averting their guilty eyes? That was the problem right there, that they were all powerless to affect any kind of change in the outside world, so what happened out there might as well happen; there was no use in getting riled up when your whole life was reduced to waiting for death with short interludes of 'pleasure'. The few of them in the room with any monstrous ability to break free and go on a rampage had been mentally neutered with hypnotism the same way as Palla had!