“Oh no. Oh no.” Turine whimpered as Sulla looked back to Behemoth again. His eyes were glassy and featureless, glowing with a faint blue pallor. His head shook slowly from side to side, his flesh unnaturally pale. The wound on his forehead had stopped bleeding, and a vicious black scab covered it.
He’s one of them now.
“Behemoth?” Turine whispered. “Can you hear me?”
“He’s dead you stup-”
Sulla didn’t have time to finish as Behemoth lurched forward with surprising speed, his arms outstretched, his golden teeth bared in a bestial frenzy. He heard Turine scream as she was pushed aside and then the lantern was kicked over and the darkness returned.
Sulla ran.
He heard Turine scream again, and he turned once to see the two pale blue orbs that had once been Behemoth’s eyes, close behind.
It’s after me!
He staggered over a crate and crashed to his knees.
Hands grabbed his neck and squeezed.
Sulla pushed backward, forcing his attacker off his feet for the briefest moment before falling down on top of him. He heard something break under his back, a dull wet sound and a crunch of bone.
Not mine. I’m unhurt. But is it enough?
He leapt up and away from Behemoth. All was darkness, and there was no sign of motion.
He grinned madly.
“I’m Sulla. Sulla! I brought Falador to her knees! Do you think one of your horde is going to be-”
Two blue orbs shot open at his feet. He heard the figure snarl.
He bolted again, but now he was closer to the perforated wall of the building. Now dull daylight gave him a chance to see.
The thing came on, limping now. Sulla could see a nail protruding from the back of Behemoth’s head, and a splinter of wood dug into its calf.
Think. Slow it down. Then kill it… again.
He reached the wall as it drew near, its eyes fixed on him. Its mouth was bloody now, its tongue bitten off at the end. Sulla dodged to one side and threw his weight into three crates that stood one atop the other. They shook violently, tottered, and then collapsed onto his pursuer.
But still it pushed upward through the wreckage, now with a dozen sharp splinters protruding from its front. Still it came on.
He ran again, reaching the door. Then outside, to the horses. Desperation drove him on, his heart pounding as he mounted his steed in a clumsy sprawl, so hastily as to nearly fall from the saddle the very second he had gained it, his arms about the beast’s neck. The animal gave a neigh of fear, for Behemoth was out now, in the open, staggering forward.
Right into my path.
Sulla knew this was his only chance.
He balanced himself precariously, his feet in the stirrups, the rein in his mouth, his handless wrists upon his horse’s neck.
He drove his heels into the horse’s flanks and they bolted forward.
The giant made no attempt to avoid the charge. The horse struck him with all its speed and weight, smashing the creature aside. Sulla cheered as the rein slipped from his mouth.
Yet still, impossibly, it clawed at the earth, dragging its broken body toward him.
“Persistent to the point of folly,” Sulla snarled, dismounting.
He looked to the building, which was now silent.
Do I dare go back in? Did Jerrod win? Or has the Wyrd made more of these things?
Suddenly the horse at his side staggered. For the first time Sulla saw the claw marks on its chest and shoulders that Behemoth must have made when he had been run down.
He has passed the poison on. Will the horse become like him?
The thought made his mind up for him. He gave a last look at Behemoth, crawling desperately toward him still, and then he turned and approached the building.
A sound came from within. It was the sound of a cleaver severing sinew and bone. It was followed by a grim laugh.
Jerrod.
Sulla entered cautiously, vulnerable in the darkness.
But I saw her scratch Jerrod. What if he’s like Behemoth now, too? There would be no chance to avoid such a creature.
The grim laugh sounded again.
But such creatures don’t laugh. Do they?
He found Jerrod in the darkness. The faintest scattering of afternoon light was just enough for him to see the outline of the werewolf before him. There was no sign of the Wyrd, but he could tell there was no small tangle of limbs upon the floor, too obscure to make out in detail.
Jerrod turned at his approach.
“We did it, Sulla,” he said. “Or I did. And just look at what we’ve done.” Jerrod laughed again.
“What do you mean?”
Jerrod rarely laughs so much. And it is not a sound I like.
“I mean I’ve been played for a fool. From the very start. My master has appeared to me, and I am cursed now. If I ever return to Morytania I will be tortured for years beyond reckoning for interfering with his plans.”
“But you were asked to do this,” Sulla said.
“Yes, but by another,” he growled. “I am sure now of two things, Sulla. The first is that it was not Lord Drakan who sent me, as I mistakenly believed. The second is that there is division in Morytania. Regardless, I can never return to my homeland.” Sulla saw Jerrod move to the side of the building. Suddenly he swung an object in the darkness, and Sulla saw that it was the dwarf’s axe. It smashed its way through two planks and let in a ray of daylight.
“I can never go home now,” Jerrod said again, his red eyes narrowing as he looked behind him. “Look Sulla.”
Sulla followed his gaze and he saw why.
The Wyrd’s severed head stood propped upon a crate, her eyes open but now without their orange flame. Sulla turned to face his one true ally.
“Then let us make a new home for you this side of the river, my friend,” he said. “Thanks to the Wyrd, we will have asylum, and with it wealth and influence. And perhaps-if Kara-Meir should ever return-our revenge.”
The Mad Axe groaned from the shadows. Mergil, too, moved slightly. Sulla looked back to where he had left Turine. She was on her knees, her hand pressed against her head where a clot of blood stained her face. Red blood. She looked at him in a daze.
She is not one of them.
“Let’s get the survivors to the cart and make our return to Varrock,” he said. And then, whispering, he spoke again. “We’ll have to burn Behemoth. He’s still crawling around outside.”
Jerrod nodded and left with the dwarf’s axe, to carry out his dreadful task.
Sulla saw Turine’s eyes follow the werewolf through the building. He sensed the fear in her, and smiled as he saw her discomfort.
“So what do I do with you, Turine?” he said airily. “I could feed you to Jerrod. That way all the glory would be mine.” He smiled. “No, I think not. Not today.”
“You… you won’t kill us?” Turine asked.
So there is still power to my reputation, he observed. But there is a time and a place for mindless violence.
Sulla shook his head.
“No,” he said. “Behemoth was poisoned by the Wyrd. He went mad, but he is our only casualty.” There is no need for her to know the whole truth about the Wyrd’s contagion. It might be very valuable later on, when I am a prisoner of King Roald’s. Anything extra for me to bargain with will be necessary. “We, however, are going to be greeted as heroes in Varrock, where I will present myself to the King. In the days and weeks to come, I will need people who I know can be trusted. I have spared your lives, Turine. You know my reputation. And you know what Jerrod is.
“You know how very, very easily that decision could have been different,” he added. “All I expect is loyalty. If ever I have need of you in the future, I expect my mercy to be repaid. Do I have your word?”