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At the edge of the shore, great white knucklebones rose from the moist earth, the great skeleton they belonged to far behind, the claws attached to them so very far from the sea the dead beast had tried to crawl into. Atop it, the figure of Togu was insignificant, a gloomy little growth staring distantly over a vast ocean.

‘Togu …’

The word crawled out of Lenk’s mouth, uncertain. He searched the lizardman with desperate eyes, for explanation as to how this had happened, for elaboration as to why it had happened. Answered with nothing but impassive silence, uncertainty shifted to anger, and the next words charged from his mouth on wrathful legs.

‘You slimy piece of diseased stool,’ he snarled, trying to ignore the impotency of his words and muscles as he pulled at his bonds. ‘You sold us, you green little sack-sucker! You betrayed us, you … you …’

‘He’s not going to answer,’ Dreadaeleon spoke, preventing any further displays of futile fury. ‘I tried the same thing, with better insults.’

The answer was unsatisfactory; anything short of leaping up and strangling the lizard-thing before chewing out his withered throat would be, Lenk knew. Togu didn’t so much as flinch, his head hanging from shoulders that looked too small for him. He was burdened, by guilt, regret, something else; Lenk wasn’t satisfied by that, either.

Short of strangulation, another round of verbal hate seemed futile, yet came rampaging up to Lenk’s lips all the same. And there it died, frozen to death as a cold realisation struck the young man firmly across the face. He swept wide, fevered eyes about the beach, saw nothing but sand, bones, netherlings. Plenty of flesh, none of it pink. Plenty of teeth, all of them jagged and frowning. Plenty of ears …

‘Where are they?’ Lenk asked in a halting, breathless voice, terrified to ask each word, horrified of the answer, scared pissless of not knowing. ‘Where is she, Togu? Where’s Kataria?’

‘He won’t tell you,’ Dreadaeleon said, ‘about her.’ He paused, choked. ‘Or Asper. I … I tried, Lenk.’

Hardly matters,’ a voice echoed in his mind. ‘ Did us no favours, no harm.’

‘He … he betrayed us,’ Lenk whispered back, his voice strained. ‘He … he …’

Will be punished. Betrayers die along with abominations.’

‘Too calm,’ Lenk muttered. ‘You’re too calm.’

You brought this on yourself. You could have fled.’

‘She is … she’s …’

Most likely. Maybe not. She can be saved.’

He breathed in, feeling overly warm.

Does not matter. A task is at hand.’

‘What task?’ he asked, shivering.

They have waited for this moment. They have waited for it to arrive. They have come. They are close.’

‘Who?’

There was no explaining how he instantly knew beyond the sudden well of dread that sprung inside him, rising up through him on oily darkness as it tried to choke the breath from him.

Tried, and failed. His breath came to him, regardless, creeping from his lips, sharp, crisp. Cold.

They are close.’

Lenk knew exactly of what the voice spoke, knew it did not lie.

Tonight, we will kill.’

That, too, was inevitable.

‘My father told me, as his father did, that the Owauku were born without life.’

Togu was speaking, his bass voice tinged with more weariness than sorrow. Lenk looked up without fury, without hatred, saw only the throat from which the words emanated, the blood pumping underneath. He knew that he would watch it spill upon the earth.

‘We were born in death,’ the lizardman continued, unaware of what the young man saw. ‘This land was alive when we did not have it, dead when they gave it to us. They fought here, the servants of the Gods and the brood of Mother Deep. For us, they fought here, they said, to keep us free from slavery. They killed one another for days. When only one stood, he gave us this dying land and abandoned us. We were born in death, we lived in death, we survive in death … betrayed.’

‘I know how you feel,’ Dreadaeleon replied, ‘poor dear.’

Wewere betrayed,’ Togu said, turning on the boy with bright, angry eyes. ‘By everyonewho claimed to love us. The servants of the Gods gave us a dying land, the Gods themselves refused to heal it, the humans …’ He muttered, turning back to the sea. ‘We do what we can to survive, cousins. You will help us. I do not like it, but I cannot shed tears for you. You would do the same thing.’

‘She …’ Lenk whispered, voice a hiss of air. ‘Where is she, Togu?’

‘A place I do not want to know.’

‘And the others? Where is-?’

The answer came in the hollow sound of flesh struck, the agonised groan that followed. Lenk struggled to look behind him and spied the a long, lanky body on the earth, hands bound behind him, unmoving as the ability to writhe in pain had apparently been beaten from him.

The answer to that, too, was evident in the towering mass of purple muscle, white hair and grey metal standing over him.

‘I expected a struggle,’ Xhai said, her voice following an iron-shod toe to the man’s ribs. ‘I expected wit. I expected the man that cut me to be one who spoke more.’

‘I expected that I was going to be sailing home tomorrow,’ Denaos replied through a voice thick with pain, ‘wearing pants and nothaving various fluids being bludgeoned out of me.’ He cleared his throat, looked up at her and grinned. ‘That,’ he said, ‘was wit.’

‘This,’ she replied, ‘is my foot.’

The force of her kick lifted him off the earth, sent him rolling away from her, his groan tinged with red fluid. His attempt at escape, however unintentional, did not go unpunished as she stalked after him and seized him by his scalp, pulling his eyes up to the level of her neck.

‘And this,’ she gestured to a wound still mending upon her collarbone, ‘is your doing. Before you, the little weakling I sent to the earth with oneblow, I was untouched by metal, unmarked.’ She pulled his gaze upwards, towards her snarling, jagged teeth. ‘They called me Unscarred.’

‘Well, they’ll no longer call meun-pissing blood,’ Denaos replied, ‘but I suppose you’re not willing to call it even at that?’

A resounding answer came upon the back of her hand.

‘You don’t even realise the insult, the unnaturalnessof it all,’ she growled. ‘I’ve killed more overscum, underscum and netherlings than you will ever know, and you, filthy little piece of pink, scar me, after I laid you low?’

‘That,’ he said, ‘is irony.’ He paused. ‘Wait, no, that might just be coincidental. Let me ask Lenk-’

NO ONE,’ her roar silenced him as she hauled him to his feet, ‘scars a Carnassial and lives.’

‘And yet … here I am.’

‘Only because no one,’ she whispered sharply, ‘scars Semnein Xhai and dies swiftly.’

The face that stared at Denaos, it was evident, was a face used to rigid, expressionless demands for obedience. The trembling of her lips, the clenching of her teeth, was something her face struggled, and failed, to contain. Rage boiled beneath her skin like a purple stew of skin, bone and hate.

Lenk assumed it was rage, anyway, not possessing the unique brand of insanity that accompanied the ability to guess at a longfaces’ emotions. How Denaos remained calm in the face of them was likewise a mystery. He was used to seeing Denaos as a trembling, scurrying thing, not the kind of man that would stare down a tower of quivering muscle and iron without so much as flinching.

The sight, Lenk thought, was impressive enough that he would remember the rogue as this, instead of the splattered mess of quivering red chunks he was undoubtedly about to become.

‘You cutme,’ she all but squealed, her voice brimming with something beyond anger.

‘It’s what I do,’ he replied, without blinking.