The irritated and unfortunately bulletproof guard facing River looks no more impressed by her sword than he did by her guns. It doesn't help that her wall and filing cabinet are as much corner as cover; if she moves out too far she's in danger of crossbow bolts and arrows, but her protections limit her movement. And the guard wades into the fray with the unruffled assurance of someone confident in his skill, his armor, or both.
A feint, a sideways dodge, a low kick and a high stab-- Those glinting purple scales around his neck, it turns out, may guard well against beheading, but they do absolutely nothing to help with a katana through the eye.
River rears back and plants a solid kick to the demon's chest in the instant before he goes limp; he crumples backwards, and her sword pulls from his eye socket with a horrible grating squelch. She ignores him, except to wipe her sword efficiently on his once-fancy suit -- you never know when demon blood's corrosive, and his is a marvelous shade of purple -- and to dive over him in a roll that carries her towards the hallway and into another cluster of guards.
Oh, well, if River's leaving, no point in hanging round here. She's nicked Spike's plan of showing off over the body of their enemy, but he doesn't bear malice. He does, however, bear knives. He leaves one through the magician's palm and one in his vocal chords -- chant now, supercilious bastard -- on his way to the door.
He's whistling something that one might, if one were an optimist, recognize as "can't catch me, I'm the Gingerbread Man..."
Harth hops out last after knocking down and stabbing through the back of the neck of the last guard standing in the room, and his eyes narrow at the sight of the girls, hands raising automatically as he approaches with a mix of caution and fascination.
Slayers. And he knew there were many here and now, but...
He stays silent, for now, eyes fixed hungrily on the face of the woman who'd spoken.
"You can tell 'cause my bleeding hands are still on," Spike adds, irritated. He doesn't want to kill Slayers.
Well, he doesn't want to want to kill Slayers. It'll have to do.
He unclasps the length of chain wrapped round his waist and starts to whirl it, incidentally clocking one of the remaining guards on the backswing. He's not sure himself if he means to throttle the bint or just wrap her weapon and render it useless, but in the meantime the thing's radius buys him a bit of non-breathing room.
Until one of the other zhirelin steps in from the side, thrusting the sharpened baseball bat she carries into the whirling chain, sacrificing her grasp on it to break his defense.
As though it's been rehearsed, another leaps in almost at the same moment to strike.
And Harth darts forward, almost in step, to kick her legs out from under her with a snarl of effort and anticipation, raising one arm against retaliation.
For the moment, the plan's on hold. He can't resist this.
A Slayer is like anything else: a collection of targets.
River slips sideways, away from that dangerous spinning chain before it's tangled and taken out of the fight. Instead, she lashes her sword downward -- blood droplets fly -- and back up to slide it into the sheath, one-handed, in the same moment her free hand blurs towards her hip.
A Slayer's like any other human in this, too: bullets kill them sure as anyone.
Spike's nose is dripping blood; his chain is gone, and there's at least three stakes aimed in his direction. He's grinning. Bugger scruples, this is what a vampire lives for, and he gets to do it on the side of sodding motherhood and apple pie. And River.
He changes face. It's traditional. And then puts a stake through Brianna's shoulderblade, 'cause it's not, and dammit, one of them should know what it feels like.
Brianna lets out a strangled sound that's half scream of rage and half cursing in pain, and with her uninjured arm backhands Spike hard enough to send him into the opposite wall.
"Cover me," she gasps to another zhirel, who's already stepping between her and the fight to give her time to pull the thing out.
Harth shudders as he breathes in, throwing the girl he'd tripped away as hard as possible away to unbalance her as far as he can. He resists for a second before letting himself slip into game face - it's not Melaka, his own face won't throw them in the least.
Then the initial shock passes, and he grins viciously at the first girl to catch his eye, and lunges foward with a knife in one hand, and the fingers of his other hooked into a claw.
River's got her own trouble: a knot of guards and zhirelin, converging on her. Gunshots draw attention.
So do bodies.
She's fast, almost inhumanly so, and her hands know their work. But so is everybody else in this corridor, and some of them have cover or demonic natures to protect them, and every twelve shots she has to reload.
Spike's got blood on his mouth and splinters in his palm, and fuck if he exactly remembers how either got there, but there's a dead guard -- a dead human guard on his hands, literally, with a snapped neck, and the body weighs more than he remembered.
He uses it for counterweight for a spinning kick at the nearest Bad Slayer, the sort of thing Andrew could do by pressing buttons in some complicated sequence Spike couldn't be arsed to remember. She falls back but its only an organized retreat, not a rout, and from somewhere to his right is the sound of River not firing a gun.
Bloody hell. He risks a glance -- takes a punch in the cheek for it from a bint wearing entirely too many rings -- and ranges himself in front of her. Vampires only survive bullets, not stop them, but such as it is, she's got cover now.
River ducks low to reload, using Spike's spinning darting form for what cover she can, and rises again to fire. She keeps moving, keeps spinning, kicks where she has to and shoots every target that presents itself; in a fight like this, that's its own kind of cover.
Keep canda. Shoot with your mind; kill with your heart.
A feint, a sideways dodge, a low kick and a high stab-- Those glinting purple scales around his neck, it turns out, may guard well against beheading, but they do absolutely nothing to help with a katana through the eye.
River rears back and plants a solid kick to the demon's chest in the instant before he goes limp; he crumples backwards, and her sword pulls from his eye socket with a horrible grating squelch. She ignores him, except to wipe her sword efficiently on his once-fancy suit -- you never know when demon blood's corrosive, and his is a marvelous shade of purple -- and to dive over him in a roll that carries her towards the hallway and into another cluster of guards.
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She's nicked Spike's plan of showing off over the body of their enemy, but he doesn't bear malice. He does, however, bear knives. He leaves one through the magician's palm and one in his vocal chords -- chant now, supercilious bastard -- on his way to the door.
He's whistling something that one might, if one were an optimist, recognize as "can't catch me, I'm the Gingerbread Man..."
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One of them should be familiar to two of the combatants.
"Dana!" she shouts at the sight of River. And then, to Spike, in fury: "Jesus christ, you people armed her?"
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Slayers. And he knew there were many here and now, but...
He stays silent, for now, eyes fixed hungrily on the face of the woman who'd spoken.
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"Wrong," she whispers over his choked gurgle, and it's almost gentle.
He collapses in the same moment her blade jerks out.
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Well, he doesn't want to want to kill Slayers. It'll have to do.
He unclasps the length of chain wrapped round his waist and starts to whirl it, incidentally clocking one of the remaining guards on the backswing. He's not sure himself if he means to throttle the bint or just wrap her weapon and render it useless, but in the meantime the thing's radius buys him a bit of non-breathing room.
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As though it's been rehearsed, another leaps in almost at the same moment to strike.
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For the moment, the plan's on hold. He can't resist this.
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A Slayer is like anything else: a collection of targets.
River slips sideways, away from that dangerous spinning chain before it's tangled and taken out of the fight. Instead, she lashes her sword downward -- blood droplets fly -- and back up to slide it into the sheath, one-handed, in the same moment her free hand blurs towards her hip.
A Slayer's like any other human in this, too: bullets kill them sure as anyone.
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He changes face. It's traditional. And then puts a stake through Brianna's shoulderblade, 'cause it's not, and dammit, one of them should know what it feels like.
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"Cover me," she gasps to another zhirel, who's already stepping between her and the fight to give her time to pull the thing out.
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Then the initial shock passes, and he grins viciously at the first girl to catch his eye, and lunges foward with a knife in one hand, and the fingers of his other hooked into a claw.
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So do bodies.
She's fast, almost inhumanly so, and her hands know their work. But so is everybody else in this corridor, and some of them have cover or demonic natures to protect them, and every twelve shots she has to reload.
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He uses it for counterweight for a spinning kick at the nearest Bad Slayer, the sort of thing Andrew could do by pressing buttons in some complicated sequence Spike couldn't be arsed to remember. She falls back but its only an organized retreat, not a rout, and from somewhere to his right is the sound of River not firing a gun.
Bloody hell. He risks a glance -- takes a punch in the cheek for it from a bint wearing entirely too many rings -- and ranges himself in front of her. Vampires only survive bullets, not stop them, but such as it is, she's got cover now.
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Nor, generally, are they equipped with detachable hook-tipped bone spikes all up their arms.
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Keep canda. Shoot with your mind; kill with your heart.
Do the job.
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