âAt least have the decency to hold the gun properly, you fool. If you donât know how, pass it to someone who does. Iâm not going to suffer being shot at by anything less than a full-fledged lowlife.â
The shooter sputtered. âScrew you.â
The gun barked, the sound booming through the woods.
Richard flashed, panning his magic in a defensive screen. Translucent white magic pulsed, forming a half sphere in front of him for a second, just long enough to knock the bullet aside. Even at full health, he couldnât maintain the shield for longer than a moment, but with the right timing, it was enough. He used to flash blue, but being in the Weird had improved his magical strength.
The slaver spat another curse and fired, squeezing the trigger in a rapid rhythm. Boom, boom, boom.
Richard flashed, matching the cadence of shots a moment before they rang out. The white screen pulsed, deflecting the projectiles.
Boom, boom, boom.
A sharp yelp cut through the shots. The gun clicked. The man was out of ammunition.
Richard turned. The dog had fallen. The idiot had shot their own dog. Thatâs what happened when the destructive potential of a manâs weapons exceeded his intelligence.
âWhat the hell did you do that for?â The dog handler stared at the dog panting in pain on the grass. âYouâre taking the heat for this one. Thereâs no way the fineâs coming out of my pocket.â
âDamn it.â The gunman shoved the gun back into his belt.
âCouldâve told you that,â the woman said. She was the tallest of the three and had the rawboned build of an experienced fighter. âBullets arenât going to hurt a blueblood.â
He wasnât a blueblood. Far from it. Richard pondered the three slavers. âSo far youâve shot your own dog and wasted twelve bullets. Any other attempts to dazzle me with your superior fighting skills?â
âWe have to go down there and get him,â the woman said.
The two slavers looked at him. Neither moved.
âNo,â the dog handler said.
âItâs a bad idea,â the thug with the gun added.
âOh, you whiny bitches.â The woman shook her head. âLook at him, heâs fifteen years older than you and barely standing. Heâll probably bleed out before I get down there.â
Richard let himself sway. It wasnât exactly difficult in his current condition. He needed all three of them within striking distance because the trees were threatening to melt again.
âIâm going down there,â the woman said. âAnd just so you know, whatever bonus I get, Iâm not sharing.â
She started down the slope. The thug with the gun spat to the side and followed her. The dog handler looked at Richard for a long moment and descended after them.
The woman pulled a lean, long sword from her sheath. The dog handler brandished an axe with a short handle. The third slaver pulled out a baton.
Richard fought to stay upright. A drop of blood dripped down from the saturated fabric of his doublet and fell onto the pine needles. Another . . .
The woman struck. She was tall and fast, with sure footing and a good reach. In the split second between reading the intent in her eyes and her body processing it, Richard released his magic. It stretched in a thin lethal line over his blade, coating its edge. He stepped forward, avoiding her lunge, and cut in a savage overhand stroke across her arm. The flash-coated sword sliced through human sinew and bone like sharp scissors through tissue paper. The severed limb fell to the ground.
Before she managed to produce a scream, Richard buried his blade in the chest of the dog handler, piercing the heart, freed it with a tug, turned, and struck backward, sliding his blade along his side into the third slaverâs groin.
The woman finally screamed. He beheaded her with one sharp stroke, spun, and finished the scrawny slaver