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Synopsis
When ancient magic suddenly returns to his land, a warrior priest must answer the call and protect his world from monsters that were once only legend in the first book of USA Today best-seller David Dalglish's epic fantasy trilogy.
Devin Eveson is a Soulkeeper, traveling through remote villages as a preacher and healer. But when a mysterious black water washes over the world, the veil is torn, flooding the land with ancient magic and forgotten races: fire that dances as if alive, corpses that walk, and creatures that can manipulate time itself. And not all the creatures that have re-awakened remember humanity fondly.
As the land grows more dangerous and more chaotic, Soulkeepers are turning up dead, their bodies transformed into macabre works of art. Devin must set aside his words of peace and accept his new role: slayer of monsters and protector of the human race.
Release date: March 19, 2019
Publisher: Orbit
Print pages: 720
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Soulkeeper
David Dalglish
“I hope your presence means Milly’s soul finds rest,” Mayor Jonathan said as he huddled in his worn brown coat. His pale skin was weathered and his head shaved, but his beard was still a lively black despite his age. “For thirty reapings I never did bury a body, but these last few? It seems the Three Sisters have grown fickle. Or perhaps they have abandoned us completely.”
A young girl lay upon the pyre before Devin, seven or eight years old at most. All but her face was covered with a pale green blanket. Snow settled atop her raven hair, granting her a soft crown. It saddened Devin to see a child taken so young. Whatever disease was ravaging Dunwerth was a cruel and vicious one. Black welts covered the dark skin of her neck, and if he pulled the blanket away, he’d find dozens more across her body.
Do you hear my voice, Milly? he spoke inside his mind. Heed my prayer, and enter the arms of the Sisters. Find safety. Find peace.
“The Sisters have not abandoned us,” Devin said to Jonathan. “When faith is tested, it either grows stronger or breaks entirely. We must not give up on the Sisters, lest they give up on us.”
He used his feet to clear away snow from where he would kneel and pray. His heavy leather coat and padded gray trousers would protect him from the cold, but he’d rather not have his knees soak through.
“Maybe so,” Jonathan said. “But since the plague hit our village I’ve had to bury the last five, not burn. Never needed a Soulkeeper to help me perform the ritual, not once until this mess began.”
“And souls used to traverse to the heavens without any intercession necessary at all. The world changes, however slowly, and so we must change with it.”
Dunwerth was not alone in its steady increase in burials. Village elders and town mayors used to be sufficient for the ritual, but now all across the Cradle, the need for skilled Soulkeepers grew. Anwyn, caretaker of the dead, seemed less and less inclined to guide souls to her bosom, forcing people to bury the bodies in the hope that their souls might return on their own some future night.
Devin recited the ritual prayer, taking great care with every syllable. He thanked Alma for the granting of life, Lyra for caring for Milly during her few short years, and last Anwyn for taking her soul into the heavens for an eternity of bliss. That finished, he scooped a handful of snow and then pressed it upon Milly’s face, slowly covering everything above the neck. Mud from ocean waters was used on the east coast, rich black prairie soil in the southern grasslands, but here in the mountains, the snow would be her pyre mask.
Once it was finished Devin pulled the burnt leather glove off his right hand and carefully drew a triangle upon the mask and then a circle around the downward point. Each side represented one of the Sisters and their connections to the others, while the bottom circle was both sun and moon, life beginning and ending at the same place in the heavens. Devin clasped his hands behind his back, bowed his head, and waited.
The moon rose higher. Not a cloud marred the beautiful field of stars. In their light, at the base of the lonely mountain range that was Alma’s Crown, in a circle of trees at the edge of the Dunwerth Forest, the two waited for Milly’s soul to ascend.
Devin immediately felt the presence of the reaping hour upon its arrival. The world tensed, the animals hushed, the night fowl grew quiet and alert. Devin held his breath, his jaw clenched tightly as he stared at the symbol he’d drawn upon Milly’s forehead. His hand drifted to the pendant hidden underneath his shirt, a silver moon inscribed into the downward point of a triangle. The symbol of Anwyn, goddess of the dusk, the caretaker of souls, and the gentle hands waiting at the end of all things. The symbol of the Soulkeepers.
“By Alma, we are born,” Devin whispered into the silence. “By Lyra, we are guided. By Anwyn, we are returned. Beloved Sisters, take her home.”
A soft blue light swelled from Milly’s forehead, shining as a translucent pillar reaching all the way to the stars themselves. The triangular symbol brightened, and a little orb of swirling light rose from her forehead and ascended the blue pillar. Devin’s every muscle relaxed. The soul had separated cleanly from the body. The risk was over.
Though the Mindkeepers of the Keeping Church debated a soul’s true makeup, Devin had never wondered. In that brilliant white light he saw memories, emotions, flickering faces of loved ones. What else could the soul be but all the person had once been? The orb rose upward, slowly at first, then faster and faster as the blue pillar of light lifted it heavenward. By the time it vanished from view, the beam had faded and the reaping hour had passed. Owls resumed hooting, and in the distance, Devin heard a chorus of wolves crying to the moon.
“Thank Anwyn for that,” Jonathan said, scratching at his beard. “I wasn’t sure I could handle another burial.”
If the soul had remained within the body Devin would have buried it beneath the ground to offer Milly another chance, every quiet unwatched night, to break free of her mortal prison and ascend to the heavens. Now that the soul had parted, the body was an empty shell, cast off no differently than a snake shedding its skin. Devin removed the cap to the oilskin hanging from his belt and began splashing it across the pyre’s thin, dry wood. He put the skin away once it was emptied and pulled two flint stones from a pouch belted to the small of his back.
Three quick strikes and the sparks lit the oil. Triangular stones created the pyre’s outline, with thick, braced logs propping up the body atop a bed of thick kindling. It’d taken over an hour to build the pyre so that it would safely burn throughout the night. Come spring, life would sprout anew from the ash shaped in the symbol of the Three Sisters.
“A fine job, Soulkeeper,” Jonathan said, patting him on the back. “But I fear you’ll have many more rituals to perform if you can’t spare us from this plague. The rest wait in my home. Come see the extent of our misery.”
“Home” was a wood cabin in the heart of quiet little Dunwerth. Devin had visited many such villages across the western frontier, and he preferred their aura of kinship to the guarded hustle of the great cities. The air was quiet, the moon settling lazily above the white-capped mountains. A thin layer of snow crunched underneath Devin’s feet as they walked the main road. He pulled his coat tighter about him and crossed his arms. His position as a Soulkeeper had sent him all throughout West Orismund, but this was a place of firsts. Dunwerth, tucked deep into the mountains of Alma’s Crown, was the westernmost village in the nation, as well as the highest in elevation. It certainly felt it. The air moved thin in his throat, his lungs never quite full. As for the cold, it mocked his layers of clothing as it relentlessly assaulted his skin.
“I’m sorry we couldn’t give you a better greeting,” Jonathan said. He stopped before the door to his home and fumbled for a key. “We take pride in our hospitality. It’s a poor host who asks you to perform a reaping ritual upon your arrival instead of warming your feet by a fire.”
“I did not come for hospitality. I came to help you in your time of need.” Devin smiled at the older man. “Though I’ll admit sitting by a fire sounds divine right about now.”
Jonathan inserted his key and turned it with a satisfying click of iron.
“I wish that you could.”
Candles lit the wide main room of the home, and a healthy blaze burned in the fireplace. A long couch was pushed to one wall, a padded rocking chair against the other, each to make room for the six men and women sleeping on the floor. In the firelight Devin easily saw the dark splotches seeping into their blankets. Two children shared the couch; a third curled up like a cat in the seat of the chair. She was softly crying.
“Sisters help us all,” Devin whispered. A smell of rotting fruit permeated the air, intermixed with sweat and piss. Occasionally one of the villagers coughed in their sleep, and it was painful to hear.
“I have a single guest room,” Jonathan said. “Three more are in there. That’s where I’ve put those who still possess the strength to walk.”
“I see you’re back,” a woman said. Devin turned to greet her. She stood in the hallway leading toward what appeared to be a kitchen. Her curly hair was pulled back from her face in a bun, her brown eyes bloodshot from exhaustion. She held a large basin of water with several cloths soaking in it. “How did… you know. The ritual. Did it go well?”
“Milly’s body is ash and her soul is in a place of light and happiness,” Devin answered.
“That’s good to hear,” the woman said. She scooted past the two of them and put the basin on a small end table. “Milly was a precious girl, and she deserved a much happier life than what the Sisters gave her.”
“Theresa’s been helping me with the sick,” Jonathan said as the woman wrung out one of the cloths. “We’d have lost more lives already if not for her care.”
“I’m only delaying what’s certain,” Theresa said, shaking her head. “I’m glad you’ve come, Soulkeeper. Only the Goddesses can spare us from this cruelty.”
Theresa gently washed the face of the nearest sleeping man, focusing on the weeping black welts. Devin slipped past her to where the crying girl lay in her chair. She was the youngest victim he had seen so far, even younger than Milly. Her face was buried into her pillow and her blanket bunched at her shoulders. She heard his footsteps and turned, her tear-filled eyes a beautiful almond color. Devin furrowed his brow upon realizing that the girl’s skin bore no sign of the black welts.
“Milly’s sister,” Theresa explained. “Her name’s Arleen. She’s not ill but we thought it best she not be alone.”
“Do you not fear contagion?” Devin asked quietly.
“Of course we do, but no other home will take her. They’re all convinced she’ll spread the illness that claimed her aunt and sister.”
Devin understood their fear but still felt it cruel. He knelt so that he and Arleen were at the same height, pulled off his hat, and set it on his knee. The girl watched him closely, as if fearing he might bite.
“Hello, Arleen,” Devin whispered.
“Hello,” she said. Her eyes lingered on the triangle-and-moon pendant hanging from his neck. “Are you a Soulkeeper?”
“I am,” Devin said. “How did you know?”
The girl pointed at his Anwyn pendant.
“Jonathan’s told me stories. He said one Soulkeeper could fight off an entire village.”
Devin smiled softly.
“Your mayor exaggerates, little one.”
“So you don’t fight bad people?”
“Most of the time villages request my aid when they need herbal medicine, legal judgments, a wedding sermon, or a large number of reaping rituals performed. But if a village is in danger, then yes, I’ll fight the bad people. I try to use my words before I use my sword and pistol, though.”
“Are there bad guys here?”
“No bad guys, just some sick people I hope to make better.”
The girl sank underneath her blanket. Devin could see the exhaustion weighing heavily on her eyes, and his heart went out to her.
“I have trouble sleeping when I’m sad,” he offered. “Are you having trouble sleeping, too?”
“I’m trying not to be sad or cry,” Arleen whispered. “Aunt Theresa says I need to be strong.”
It hurt to hear a child who looked maybe six years old say such a thing.
“Even the strong cry,” Devin said. He reached into one of several pockets of his thick coat and pulled out a small dried root, which he held before her so she might see. “While you cry, try to remember everything good about Milly, all right? Her smile. Her laugh. The times you played together. And when you can’t cry anymore, will you do something for me? Will you chew this root?”
“Will it make me sleepy?”
“It will,” Devin said.
She took the root in hand, then swept it underneath her blankets.
“I’ll try,” she whispered.
“I ask for nothing more.”
He pulled her blanket higher over her as she curled deeper into the chair, her bleary eyes squeezing shut. A mournful shiver ran through his chest. So far the girl showed no signs of the sickness. So far…
Jonathan’s hand settled on his shoulder.
“Lyra’s love graces your touch, Soulkeeper. We are blessed that the Keeping Church chose you for our request. Please, follow me. We must speak plainly.”
Jonathan’s room was beyond the kitchen, a tiny square crammed full of books on desks and shelves. The bed was an incidental thing in the corner. Two lit candles slowly burned in their holders.
“I know of three more infected staying with their families instead of here,” the mayor said as he settled onto the edge of his bed. “They claim they’ll give better care than I can, and they may well be right.”
“This disease,” Devin asked. “Is it always fatal?”
“Without exception,” Jonathan said. The words left his tongue like lead. “Have you ever witnessed anything like this, Soulkeeper?”
Devin knew a hundred recipes to dry, chop, boil, and grind herbs and flowers to heal a variety of ailments, and just as many prayers to accompany the cures. But this dark rot spreading throughout the body?
“Never this extreme,” Devin said. “I know of nothing that will fight it. The best I can do is ease their pain.”
Jonathan ran both hands over his bald head.
“I thought as much. Truth be told, Soulkeeper, I did not expect that you could help these people when I summoned you.”
Devin kept his tone calm despite his sudden annoyance. Petitioning the Keeping Church for a Soulkeeper was a serious affair. There were always more in need than there were Soulkeepers to give it, and lying on a petition could result in criminal charges depending on how grievous the lie.
“I have helped many places beset by illness and disease,” Devin said. “How could you be so certain I would be of no help here?”
“Because it’s happened before,” the mayor said. “Years ago, when my grandfather was mayor. No plant or flower helped then, and I expect none will help now.”
Devin’s anger grew.
“I have sworn upon my life to bring aid to Dunwerth in its time of need,” he said. “If I am not here to administer to the sick, then pray tell, what am I here for?”
Jonathan rose from the bed, pulled a book off a shelf, and offered it to Devin. A page was marked by a long loose cloth, and he opened to it and glanced over the loose, sloppy handwriting in the dim candlelight.
I know my story will earn no belief, so I write this in secret, to be judged only after my death. I’ll care not your opinions once in Anwyn’s hands. Call me a fool if you wish, but I witnessed the impossible. I knelt before living stone and demanded its blood. I saw its face. I heard it speak its name like a woken god.
Arothk. The only cure to pock-black disease.
“That is my grandfather’s journal,” Jonathan said when Devin glanced up with a sour expression on his face. “He was a good man, and a good mayor. He told no wild tales, and he was known throughout his life as a man of honesty.”
“A faery tale?” Devin said, snapping the book shut. “I traveled all this way from Londheim to help you find a faery tale?”
Jonathan’s face flushed bright red.
“You insult my grandfather,” he said. “This is no faery tale. It is real, and it saved the lives of each and every person who had succumbed to the disease. Keep reading. He passed through the forest to the bald mountain, and at its base he met with Arothk, a creature of stone that gave of its own blood to cure the darkness.”
“Enough,” Devin said. “Why not send someone else? One of your hunters could have made the trip and back a dozen times before my arrival.”
“Because we need your skill with those,” Jonathan said. He pointed to the long, thin blade sheathed against Devin’s left thigh and the hammerlock pistol holstered against his right. “Twice I have sent hunters into the woods, and neither time did they return. That forest is a cursed place now; anyone who steps inside can sense it. Help us, Soulkeeper. People I love and care about are dying. I may be desperate, but only because the solution is before me and I lack the strength to reach it. This is not some trumped-up tale told around a campfire. This is real.”
Devin opened the book again, glancing over several more lines. It started with the goddess Lyra visiting the grandfather in a dream and ordering him to travel through the nearby forest to the base of the bald mountain. She’d told him that a creature from a time before mankind would await him there. From it, he would receive his cure.
“Jonathan, please, listen to me,” he said. “The Sisters created the Cradle for us. Humans. They did not create monsters or faeries or whatever this Arothk creature supposedly is. We are their children, their only children. Whatever stories you’ve heard are not true, they were never true, and I will not risk my life and the lives of those here because of the ravings of a dead man’s journal.”
The mayor fell silent. Devin didn’t blame him. In many ways, he’d just pronounced a death sentence for much of the village.
“I will do what I can to ease the burdens of the ill,” he said, putting up a callous front. “For your sake, I’ll not report your real request to the church.”
“Your herbs and bandages are like pissing on a wildfire,” Jonathan said. “At least you’ll be here for the reaping rituals. Anwyn knows there will be a lot of them.”
Devin slammed the journal down upon the desk.
“Do not belittle my coming here,” he said. “I swore an oath to aid Dunwerth and its villagers, and I did not take it lightly. I would put your lives above my own, yet what options do you give me, Jonathan? Forget silly tales in hidden journals. What would you have me do?”
“There is but one thing I would have you do, and you lack any faith or trust in me to do it.”
It hurt having a man so desperate and afraid look upon him, judge him, and find him wanting. Devin rubbed his eyes as his mind whirled. Forget the stories of this Arothk creature. What was the truth hidden in the faery tale? If he pried away the fanciful retelling of dreams and ancient creatures granting cures, what might be left to explain the events that occurred?
“Your grandfather went to this… bald mountain, and he came back with a cure for the same disease you’re suffering from now,” Devin asked. “Is that correct?”
“More or less.”
These people were clearly in need. Every fiber in his body wished to help them in some way. He could ease their pain with roots and herbs, but that was like massaging the shoulders of a man awaiting the fall of the executioner’s axe. It wasn’t a cure. Worse, he couldn’t shake the nagging fear of what would happen if the disease spread from this little remote village to some of the larger towns, or Goddesses forbid, Londheim itself. The need for a cure would be dire…
“Let me rest for a few hours,” he said. “My journey here was long.”
“So you’ll go?” Jonathan asked. Cautious optimism bubbled into his voice.
“I will go, but not to spill blood from a stone. Some weed or mushroom saved your people years ago, and I pray Lyra guides me to it now. As for your forest, I have no fear of lingering ghosts. Souls reside in the hands of Anwyn, Mayor, and she does not lose track.”
Jonathan’s dire smile gave him chills.
“You dismiss much,” he said. “Keep your heart and mind open, Soulkeeper. Here in Alma’s Crown we have learned to trust what you in the east dismiss as children’s tales. We are the edge of the known world, and you soon walk into lands beyond. Tread carefully.”
Devin knelt before the forest’s edge, his tricorn hat in his hands and his head bowed in prayer.
“Lyra, guide my steps this night as you do all nights,” he whispered. “Protect the life Alma gave me, and should I fall, deliver me swiftly into Anwyn’s embrace.”
The howl of a distant wolf punctuated the end of his prayer. Devin pulled his hat low over his face and reclaimed the torch he’d staked into the ground. He took in a deep breath and then let it out slowly, the niggling fears and warnings of Dunwerth’s mayor exiting with it.
“A forest like all others,” he said. His gaze lingered on the enormous mountain looming over the pines. “All right, maybe not quite like all others.”
The first mile was an easy one. The ground was flat, the snow thin, and the trees evenly spaced. Devin much preferred the pine forests of the west to the Helwoads that grew north of Stomme, his hometown. Those forests were unruly messes of brush and pits, the trees themselves of wildly varying heights and separation, as if the oaks and elms jostled each other in a gluttonous competition for the sun. Not here. Here, even the wild felt organized into straight lines.
Devin held his torch high and enjoyed the quiet of the forest after the stress of the reaping ritual and visiting the plague-ridden of Dunwerth. Hardships would return, and he would burden himself when they did, but for now he refilled his heart and mind with the tranquility.
The third mile was when the forest turned dark.
“Who is there?” he asked aloud, quickly turning about. Nothing but snow and tree trunks softly lit by his torch, but he was certain of being watched. Hearing his voice break the quiet only unsettled him further. His footfalls crunching the top layer of snow were like shattering stone.
“If Jonathan sent you to aid me, please come forth,” he told the night. “I gladly welcome the company.”
Glinting blue eyes watched him from the corner of his vision. He spun, saw nothing. Every hair stood on end. Again, just beyond his line of sight, he saw blue eyes. Little phantoms, just watching, always vanishing the moment he turned. Devin pushed on through the forest, keeping his focus straight ahead as the incline steadily sharpened. It was only a trick of the night, he told himself. His torch’s light reflecting off the snow, combining with the moonlight…
Devin halted several minutes later and closed his eyes.
“Anwyn, send me your grace,” he whispered in prayer. Trick or not, he needed to calm down. So far nothing but a little glint of light had him unnerved, that and the warnings of an old man who’d never left his little frontier town of Dunwerth.
An earsplitting howl broke his prayer. It was close, and many more howls responded in answer.
Devin jammed the base of his torch into the ground and dropped to one knee while drawing his hammerlock pistol from its holster. He cocked the hammer halfway, exposing an opening into the barrel. His left hand pulled a flamestone out from a belt pouch, and pushed the heavy red orb through the opening and into the barrel. Cocking the hammer all the way back slid a metal shield across the opening, protecting against the possibility of an early discharge. He pulled a lead shot wrapped in thin cloth from a second pouch while simultaneously sliding the ramrod out from its sheath underneath the barrel. Two quick pumps and the pistol was loaded.
It took him all of seven seconds to perform the maneuver, but those seven felt like an eternity. Devin left the torch positioned in the snow and drew his sword as a pack of wolves emerged from the woods and circled around him. Devin kept perfectly still, his pistol ready in his left hand, his sword in the right. By his count there were six, and he scanned them in an attempt to locate their pack leader.
“Forgive my trespassing into your domain,” Devin said. He kept his voice firm and his arms away from his body, which stretched his heavy coat and made him appear larger. His eyes never met theirs. He didn’t wish to issue them a challenge, only convince the creatures that he would be no easy prey.
“Leave me be. Take your hunt elsewhere.”
Devin slowly rotated, ensuring that no wolf stayed out of sight for long. They should have been snarling and nipping at his legs to scare him into fleeing… only they weren’t. The six held their places, their teeth bared, their eyes watching him with frightening intelligence. Such strange behavior worried him more than any howl they could have made. Locating the biggest of the wolves, Devin pointed his pistol at its head and hoped the black-and-gray beast was their pack leader.
“I said be gone!” Devin shouted. Still they remained, unafraid.
You leave me no choice, he thought sadly. Wolves were majestic creatures, and he’d refused all offers to wear one of their pelts during his many travels about the western lands. But if anything would scare them off, it’d be the noise and power of his hammerlock. Taking aim between the pack leader’s eyes, he squeezed the trigger.
The hammer snapped forward, the sharp spike on its front piercing the flamestone in half. The power within the orb exploded the instant it broke, ejecting fire and shot with a thunderous roar. His target never made a noise. The bullet caved in the front of its skull, dropping it dead instantly. The recoil pulled his aim to the sky, and Devin held the pistol above his head as smoke wafted from the muzzle.
None of the other wolves moved. The blast’s echo gave the night its only sound. Their yellow eyes looked to his, and Devin swore he saw a uniquely human emotion in them: hate.
What in the void is happening here? he wondered.
Devin half-cocked the hammer with exaggeratedly slow movements, hoping not to provoke the wolves. The moment it clicked, the wolves growled in unison. Devin holstered his pistol under their watchful gaze. There would be no chance to reload.
“More of you will die,” Devin said, his firm voice belying the growing unease in his breast. “Leave, now, all of you! Go!”
One of the remaining five finally broke from their position, but not to flee. The wolf trotted over to the downed corpse of their pack leader, nuzzled against the wound, and then turned Devin’s way. Blood smeared across its face like war paint. Human intelligence sparkled in its yellow eyes.
“Hunt,” it growled.
The five wolves lunged, nearly catching Devin flatfooted from the shock of hearing that singular word. He rolled to his right at the last moment, his sword braced against his left shoulder. The wolf overshot, its lower body landing awkwardly atop Devin’s roll. The sword sliced into its belly, spilling blood and intestines across his coat. Devin exploded back to his feet, his left arm flinging the wolf’s body at the others to stall their attack. A second leapt ahead, its jaws wide. Devin jammed the tip of his sword straight down its throat, letting the creature kill itself as its weight slammed against him. He held in a scream as the creature’s sharp claws scratched at his chest, his blood mixing with the blood of wolves.
The remaining three held back, suddenly wary of his sword. Devin took the moment to yank the torch free from the snow and wield it in his left hand. He batted the fire at them. Instead of backing away from the flame, they steadily circled, waiting for the right moment to attack with cold, calculated patience.
Fear clouds your mind, he told himself as he watched their pacing. It didn’t speak. Wolves don’t speak.
Devin sensed the wolf at his rear leaping for his back. He spun, his torch up and his sword slashing. His timing was off by the slightest amount, and his blade caught near the hilt in the wolf’s ribs. Its body slammed into his, carrying them to the ground. Only the position of his torch saved him, the fire scraping across the beast’s left eye. It snapped for his neck, missing and latching onto his shoulder instead. Each tug of its jaws was a scattershot of pain throughout his body. Devin ripped his sword free and then sawed at the wolf’s underbelly, a mad race to rip the creature apart before it did likewise to him.
Its death came suddenly and without warning. Devin gasped as the wolf’s weight collapsed atop him, but there was a blood-soaked silver lining: The dead beast offered a moment’s protection against the other two wolves. They nipped and dove at him, seeking openings. Devin pushed the carcass up while rolling. His head curled into the chest of the dead wolf so they could only tear at his back. One leapt atop him, teeth sinking into the nape of his neck. Another went lower, closing its teeth about Devin’s ankle. Devin twisted again, his sword swiping through the air.
The blood-masked wolf released upon seeing the attack and hopped up and away, but not quickly enough. Devin’s sword sliced across its left front paw, cleaving it off at the joint. It whimpered and collapsed onto one side. Devin was given no reprieve. He was on his back now, exposed, and the other wolf took every advantage it could. The beast jumped atop his chest, its hungry mouth biting.
Teeth clasped about his face, pulling and tugging with an iron grip. Devin couldn’t see, his eyes clenched shut out of reflex. He could barely think at all. Instinct ruled his actions, his left hand grabbing at the wolf’s head, his right stabbing viciously. His sword cut open its throat once, twice, three times. Its
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