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[Gotrek & Felix 12] - Zombieslayer Page 7
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Page 7
Felix frowned and looked around the hall as he leaned in. Had she spotted something strange? Was something wrong?
“What is it?” he whispered.
“We are leaving tomorrow with Snorri, yes?” she asked.
“Aye.”
“And Zeismann says we can have a private room tonight?”
“Aye,” Felix said again. “If we want one, we are welcome—”
His eyes widened as he followed her train of thought to its conclusion. Though they had admitted their attraction to each other weeks ago, on the night she had saved him from freezing to death in the Drakwald, they had not, in all the time since, had any time to be alone together. Privacy had been fleeting on the trail, and being chased by beastmen was not particularly conducive to a romantic mood. The abject terror tended to get in the way.
But now, though a horde of undead was marching ever south towards them, they were for once in no immediate danger, and they would not be sleeping with only a thin sheet of canvas between them and their travelling companions.
“Ah,” he said. “I see.”
Suddenly he couldn’t finish his stew fast enough.
But though they practically raced across the courtyard—now filling up with the tenants coming in from Graf Reiklander’s outlying farms—when they had finally found a room and closed the door behind them, they were strangely shy to begin.
For almost a full minute, Felix stood by the simple, neatly made soldier’s bed, stroking Kat’s hair and shoulders.
“Are—are you having second thoughts?” Kat asked at last.
“About you?” Felix laughed. “Gods, no. It’s only, having waited so long, I’m afraid we might have built up so great a mountain of expectation that… that we might not be able to get over it.”
Kat smiled shyly. “You mean, now that we can, can we?”
“Aye,” said Felix. “Exactly.”
Kat shrugged. “Well, there’s only one way to find out.”
And with that, she tugged down on his collar until he bent to her, then went up on her tip-toes to kiss him. They came together hesitantly at first, but then Kat’s lips parted and their tongues met. Filled with the strength of it, Felix crushed her to him, lifting her off her feet, and they toppled slowly to the bed.
FIVE
Felix and Kat walked together on a forest path. They were only a mile or so from Bauholz, where they were going to visit old Doktor Vinck. Felix was happy. It was an early spring day, still cold in the shade of the trees, but with a warm sun finding his face every now and then as they passed through a clearing, and he hadn’t a care in the world. Gotrek wasn’t there. Snorri and Rodi weren’t there. Only he and Kat walked the path, and they were in no hurry, nor under any obligation.
Felix squeezed her hand. She squeezed back, and they stopped under the budding branches of an ancient oak, but as they leaned in to kiss, a distant cry reached Felix’s ears—a bird of prey perhaps. He ignored it and bent closer, but Kat pulled back and looked around.
“Screaming,” she said.
“It’s only a hawk,” said Felix.
“No.” Kat stepped away from him, back onto the trail. “Can’t you hear it? People are being killed.”
She started towards Bauholz again, jogging now.
“Kat, come back. It’s nothing.”
She ignored him and ran on. He grunted in annoyance and started after her. The day was too perfect for trouble. He wanted her to come back and kiss him.
They ran out of the trees. The log walls of Bauholz rose beyond the fields before them, black smoke drifting in a cloud above them. The screams were clearer now. They were coming from the village.
Then they were at the gates, though Felix didn’t remember running to them, shouting and pounding on the rough logs. Cries of terror and rage and the sharp reek of burning came from within.
Kat kicked the door. “Get up!” she bellowed. “Arm yourselves! We are under attack.”
Felix thought it was a very strange thing for her to say.
Felix blinked around, disorientated. He was not at the gates of Bauholz. He was in a dark room, lying in a cramped cot, his right side warmed by Kat and his left freezing where it pressed against the wall. But though the dream was fading, the shouting and pounding were getting louder and closer.
“Up, Reiklanders!” came the harsh low voice, and Felix wondered how he could have thought it was Kat’s. “To the walls!”
He raised his head and groaned, a terrible crick in his neck. Kat was sitting up beside him, naked and pushing her hair out of her face. The white streak in the middle of her dark brown tresses gleamed green in the light filtering through the room’s diamond-paned windows. It looked like the castle had sunk beneath a sea of poison.
“What’s going on?” Kat mumbled.
“I don’t know.” He tried to sit up, then winced. His left leg was completely asleep.
The door slammed open and one of Nordling’s knights leaned in. “Up and out! The dead—” He stopped when he saw Felix and Kat. “What in Sigmar’s name are you doing here? These are our quarters!”
He waved an impatient hand and ran on, banging on the next door down the hall.
“The dead?” echoed Felix.
He and Kat looked at each other, then scrambled to their feet and started grabbing for their armour and weapons.
Spearmen, greatswords and knights hurried past them as Felix and Kat climbed the stone steps to the top of the castle wall. Torches glinted off their swords and spear-tips as they ran to their positions, and gleamed on the gun barrels of the handgunners who crouched between the crenellations, but the flames couldn’t blot out Morrslieb’s sickly green glow, which made the lowering clouds look like fat phosphorescent maggots, and turned everyone’s skin a pasty grey.
To the right as they reached the parapet, Felix saw von Volgen talking earnestly with his knights, while to the left, Gotrek, Snorri and Rodi peered down over the battlements. Snorri had acquired a peg leg from somewhere, freshly sawn off at the bottom to fit his short frame, and had his hammer back, while Rodi had a new axe of dwarfen make to replace the one he had broken at Tarnhalt’s Crown. Felix wondered where it had come from. A gift of the garrison?
“Snorri wants to go down and fight them,” Snorri was saying as Felix and Kat crossed to stand beside the slayers.
“Don’t worry, Father Rustskull,” said Rodi. “They’ll come to us soon enough.”
“Too soon,” said Gotrek, shooting a grim glare at Snorri.
Kat and Felix leaned out over the walls to see what the slayers were looking at. The wan moonlight confused Felix’s eyes, and at first he saw only twisted shadows lurching through the winter grass, but after a moment the shadows resolved themselves into walking corpses, both beast and man, hundreds of them converging slowly but inexorably on the castle. Already a thick crowd of them milled restlessly at the edge of the swift-flowing moat, while more and more stumbled forwards to join them, a moving carpet of the undead that stretched into the night for as far as he could see.
Gotrek was right. The dead had come too soon. Felix and Kat had planned to leave with Snorri the next morning, and be well on their way to Karak Kadrin before the horde arrived. Now they were trapped in the castle with everyone else. Gotrek must be furious. He had denied himself and Rodi a certain doom at Tarnhalt’s Crown in order to get Snorri away from the undead, and now it was all for naught. Snorri was in worse danger than before, and Gotrek had done nothing but make an enemy of Rodi.
On the other hand, this wasn’t necessarily the end of everything. Felix had fought the undead before and survived. He knew he was more than a match for any ten of them, and Gotrek was more than a match for a hundred. Still his stomach sank and his mouth went dry just looking at their lifeless, upturned eyes. And it wasn’t just the dread of something dead returning to a travesty of life that chilled his blood, though that was horrible enough. It was the sheer, mindless inevitability of them. They were like ants, or water. A raindrop or a si
ngle ant was no threat. He could flick them away without effort. But a million ants, or a flood of water, those would find cracks in any wall, would spill over any barrier, would pull a man down and drown him in sheer numbers.
That was the true horror of the walking dead. They couldn’t be reasoned with, couldn’t be panicked into running away, couldn’t be bought off or convinced to change allegiances. They were an unnatural force, as relentless as time or tides, and like time and tides, they would eventually wear you down, as mountains were worn down into hills and dead cattle were slowly stripped to the bone by thousands of tiny jaws. Zombies were as inevitable as death, for they were death.
“Look at ’em all,” said a spearman, his eyes dull. “Endless. Endless.”
“And there’s beasts among them,” said a handgunner, making the sign of the hammer. “Sigmar, if that necromancer can make zombies of them monsters, what chance have we?”
“We must all pray to Morr,” said an artilleryman, touching a pin in the shape of Morr’s raven on his cap. “He will settle them and set us free.”
“Less of this talk!” cried General Nordling. “We are Reiklanders! We fear nothing!” He was striding along the wall at the head of six household knights, with Steward von Geldrecht, and blind Father Ulfram and his acolyte, Danniken, following behind.
The men turned as the general stepped up into a crenellation and faced them, his back to the zombies. Felix could see that he was pale behind his jutting black beard, but he kept the fear out of his voice.
“Yes, our enemy is terrifying,” he said, as more men gathered around him. “Yes, it is legion. But you are the strongest of the strong, the bravest of the brave, forged in battle against the Empire’s greatest foes. Did we not hold the line together at Wolfenburg? Did we not drive back the fiends at Grimminhagen?”
“Aye!” cried the men. “For the Empire! For the graf!”
Von Volgen and some of his men filed in at the back of the crowd, listening as Nordling continued.
“Neither do you stand naked and alone in the field against these horrors!” shouted the general, slapping the stones of the wall. “You are protected by the defences of the finest castle of the Empire. Ogres could not ford our moat without being swept away. Dragons could not tear down our walls, so what chance have these poor corpses? Our battlements are dwarf-built and woven with powerful wards against the undead. They have endured for eight hundred years. Never has Castle Reikguard fallen, and never will it fall!”
The men cheered again, until Nordling raised his hands again. “Quiet now for Father Ulfram, who will lead us in a prayer to Sigmar to give us strength for the coming—”
Something black and swift swooped out of the sky and slammed into him before he could finish, smashing him into Father Ulfram and knocking him off his feet.
“General! Father!” cried von Geldrecht, ducking and running to them as the black thing swept into the air again on leather wings.
“Kill it!” shouted a handgunner, pointing.
“Shoot it!” shouted a spearman.
Then the rest came.
Felix could not count the number of black shadows that streaked down out of the dim green sky and slammed into the defenders. It seemed as if the night had shattered and fallen in upon them. All along the walls, people were knocked to the courtyard, armour crushed and flesh torn, while others twisted and flailed as the things rode their backs, looking for all the world like lunatics dancing in flapping black cloaks. More were attacking the refugee farmers who had set up their meagre tents around the harbour. The peasants ran screaming as the ragged shades shredded their shelters and snatched up men, women and children to drop them to the flagstones or into the dark water of the harbour.
Felix ducked a swooping silhouette and drew his sword as Kat fired an arrow after it.
“Sigmar! What are they?”
Gotrek sheared the wing off one and it crashed at their feet in a spray of maggots and clotted bile. Felix recoiled at its rotting, snoutless face.
“Bats,” said the Slayer.
“Giant bats!” said Snorri, delighted.
“Giant dead bats,” said Rodi, wrinkling his bulbous nose. “Grungni, what a reek.”
“So much for wards against the undead,” grunted Gotrek.
He and Rodi clambered onto the battlements and slashed around like whirlwinds as more black bodies dived at them. Snorri tried to follow, but couldn’t manage with his new peg, and so stood guard with Felix over Kat as she continued loosing arrows.
A bat flew straight at Felix’s face. He slashed with Karaghul and opened its chest to the bone, but momentum drove it into him, and it scrabbled at his chainmail shirt with diseased claws as teeth like black coffin nails snapped an inch from his cheek.
He retched, nauseated, and shoved it away, then cleaved its decaying head with his sword. It spun down over the wall, and Kat sent another after it, the fletching of her arrow sprouting from its eye. Felix made to turn back, but Kat laughed and pointed down towards the moat.
“Look at them!” she cried. “Come on, you bone bags! More! More!”
Felix followed her gaze and saw that the undead, apparently stirred by the fighting over their heads, were pushing towards the walls—and toppling straight into the moat, where they were swept away by the roiling current. Dozens were floating downstream, and dozens more were falling.
Kat smiled grimly. “At this rate the whole horde will be washed away!”
Gotrek chopped a bat out of the air directly above her head. “Forget them, little one,” he rasped. “Fight what you can hit.”
Kat scowled and she and Felix turned back to the bats on the walls, dropping them with sword and bow as they wheeled and swooped.
All along the parapet, the handgunners, knights and spearmen had rallied around their officers and were now fighting off the black shadows in good order, but they had already suffered terrible losses, and more fell every moment—punched from the parapet by the heavy bodies of the bats and torn apart by their claws. On Felix’s right, the greatswords were sweeping their huge blades in wide circles over their heads, protecting Captain Bosendorfer as he pulled one of their number back onto the battlements. On his left, General Nordling had recovered, and was forming a square with his retinue around Father Ulfram and his acolyte while Steward von Geldrecht, bleeding badly from a wound on his leg, limped after them. Further on, Lord von Volgen and his men were fighting their way down the far stairs while the bats slammed down into them like black meteors.
In the courtyard Captain Zeismann and his spearmen were trying to herd the peasants towards the wide double doors of the underkeep as their tents burned down around them, but the farmers were being picked off as they ran, and many spearmen fell as well.
Then, with a sound like windmill blades turning in a gale, something huge swept over the wall, blotting out the sky. Felix ducked, and the thing skidded to a landing on the parapet beyond him, ploughing through Nordling’s knights and knocking them flat with its enormous wings, as the armoured warrior on its back swept around it with an ugly black axe.
The beast was a wyvern—or perhaps a crude patchwork of several wyverns. It had a wyvern’s vast leathery wings and whipping tail, and a cruel, horned head that snapped at the end of a long neck, but its scaly skin was ten different colours, the wings black, the head green, the body grey and red and brown, and in ten different stages of decay, with thick scars and stitches holding it all together; but as gruesome as it was, the rider mounted athwart its hulking shoulders was more terrifying still.
He looked more than a yard taller than Felix, and was encased in scarred black armour of ancient design. A heavy-browed skull, etched with age, glowered out from under a horned helm, green flames kindling in his empty eye sockets. He swung from the wyvern’s saddle and waded into Nordling’s retinue, his black axe trailing a glittering cloud of dark specks like the tail of a comet. Three knights died instantly as the fell weapon shredded their armour like parchment, and the rider trod
their corpses underfoot to stride towards Nordling and Father Ulfram as von Geldrecht crabbed out of the way, gibbering with fear.
Gotrek, Rodi and Snorri stared. The ancient rune of power on the head of Gotrek’s axe was glowing red.
“Mine,” he said.
“No, mine,” said Rodi.
“Snorri’s!” shouted Snorri.
The three slayers charged as Nordling raised his sword and stepped in front of the skeletal warrior to protect Father Ulfram. The rider’s flaking axe snapped the general’s sword in half and smashed him off the parapet to bounce down the roof of the temple of Sigmar and into the courtyard.
“Face me, wight!” roared Gotrek, chopping into the wing of the undead wyvern as he dodged past it. The wyvern shrieked at the wound and leapt into the air as Rodi and Snorri ran under it.
“Face me.” called Rodi.
“Face Snorri!” bellowed Snorri.
“Come on,” said Felix, hacking at the swooping bats and starting forwards. “We’re safer near them than away.”
Kat dropped another bat point-blank, then followed, shouldering her bow and drawing her hatchets.
Gotrek reached the armoured wight first, and slashed for his knees just as he was turning from von Geldrecht to see what the commotion was. The dread warrior roared and blocked, and a choking cloud of obsidian dust shivered from his black axe as it clanged haft to haft with Gotrek’s, covering the Slayer in black grit. Rodi struck next, but his blow glanced off the ancient black armour without leaving a mark. Snorri’s hammer did no better. The wight seemed hardly to feel their attacks, and hacked back at them.
“Stand aside, Gurnisson!” shouted Rodi. “You owe me this doom for that which you denied me at Tarnhalt’s Crown!”
“I owe you nothing!” barked Gotrek. “Take it if you can.”
Kat and Felix fell in behind the slayers, then turned as the wyvern whumped down again behind them, snapping and shrieking. Felix cursed and dodged right as Kat dived left, almost falling off the narrow parapet.