Yet not one sound did they hear. No words, no laughter, no crying, not even the calls of birds or insects.
Reborn Ureh itself might seem, but the stillness within reminded all of the stunning fates of the inhabitants.
A short distance in, the main avenue split off into three directions. Kentril studied each in turn before saying, "Gorst! Take four men down the right for about a hundred paces, no more. Albord! You, Benjin, and four more check the left. The rest of you, come with Tsin and me. No one goes farther than I said, and we all meet back here as soon as possible."
He did not include Zayl in any of the groups, especially his own, but the necromancer followed him regardless. Kentril took the point, Oskal and another man flanking him just a step behind. Eyes darting from one side of the street to the other, the captain kept careful count of each step as they proceeded.
Building after building they passed. Light gleamed in some of them, but each time one of the party investigated, they found no sign of any life.
"Check those doors," Kentril commanded Oskal, pointing to what looked to be a business on the left. Lit within more than any of the previous structures, it drew the captain's attention like a moth to the proverbial flame.
Guarded by another mercenary, Oskal tried one of the doors. It swung open with little effort. Leaning in, the veteran surveyed the interior for a moment, then, in a relaxed voice, called back, "A potter's shop, cap'n! Stacks of fancy pieces on the walls. There's one even sittin' on the wheel lookin' freshly shaped." An avaricious look spread over his ugly features. "Think we should check to see if he left any coin in the till?"
"Leave it. It'll still be there when we get around to it—if you even want such meager coin once we've gone through this entire place!"
The mercenaries laughed at this suggestion, and even Tsin cracked a rare smile, but Zayl remained almost devoid of emotion. Kentril noticed that his hand touched the large pouch again.
"What is that you've got in there, necromancer?"
"A keepsake, nothing more."
"I think it's more than—"
A shriek filled the air, echoing time and again through the empty avenues of Ureh.
"That sounds like one of ours!" gasped Oskal.
The captain had already begun to turn back. "It is! Run, you fools!"
The cry did not repeat, but now came the sounds of cursing men, the clatter of arms, and what very briefly might have been the low, sinister rumble of some animal.
Gorst and the rest joined Kentril's men at the original intersection. No one spoke, each breath now saved only for action.
They came across tall, gangly Albord, a white—haired fighter from an area north of Captain Dumon's own, shouting at four other mercenaries, all of whom had hunted looks in their eyes. Near Albord's feet, a torn and ravaged form lay sprawled near the right side of the avenue. It took Kentril a moment to realize by process of elimination that the mangled, bloody mess had once been Benjin.
"What happened?" the captain demanded.
"Something came out, tore him apart, and moved so quick none of us saw it much at all!"
"Was a cat!" insisted another man. His expression turned dumbfounded. "A huge, hellish cat…"
"All I saw was a blur!" insisted Albord.
"No blur rips open a man's guts like that!"
Kentril looked to Tsin. "Well?"
The sorcerer raised his staff, drawing a circle in the air. He stared upward for a moment, then said, "Whatever it was, it's not around here anymore, Dumon."
"Can you be certain?" asked Zayl. "Not all things are so easily detected by magic."
"Do you sense anything, cretin?"
Zayl pulled free the ivory dagger Kentril had earlier seen. Before the eyes of the startled mercenaries, he pricked a finger with the tip. As a few droplets of blood coursed down the blade, the necromancer muttered silent words.
The dagger flared bright, then faded to normal again.
"I sense nothing," the pale figure reported. "But that does not mean that there is nothing."
Swearing, Kentril turned to Albord. "Which way did it head after it killed Benjin?"
"Toward that building there on the left… I think."
"Nah!" interrupted a fellow mercenary. "It turned and went farther up into the dark!"
"You're daft!" came the one who had identified it as a cat. "It whirled around and darted back the way it came! That's how I saw it fer what it was!"
The rest of the party looked at Albord's group as if all of them had gone mad. One of Gorst's men spat on the building next to which he stood, snarling, "I'm beginnin' to wonder if maybe they killed 'im themselves, eh, captain?"
It would not have been the first time that mercenaries had murdered one another over treasure, but Captain Dumon did not see that as the case this time. Still, it made sense to question those involved further. "Where were each of you when Benjin bought it?"
"Spread out like you've always taught us, captain," Albord replied. "Jodas there, me next to him, Benjin right there where Toko," — he indicated the man who had accused him of murder—"is—"
And at that moment, a flash of black burst out of the doorway next to Toko, catching him across the chest.
The fighter screamed in much the same way as Benjin had as curled claws a foot in length tore through paddedleather and flesh, revealing to his horrified companions wet, red ribs and ravaged organs. Toko actually managed to look down at his horrendous wound before death claimed him and he toppled forward.
A beast that, yes, could vaguely be described as a cat emerged from the building, hissing at the humans. Yet no cat stood seven feet in height and had eyes red and without pupils. In the light of the lamps, its fur looked jagged, almost sharp, and fire black. The hell cat roared once, a blood—curdling sound, and revealed not one but two sets of long, feline teeth.
"Pincer pattern!" called Kentril. "Pincer pattern!"
The familiar tone of their captain giving commands brought the rest of the soldiers back to the moment at hand. They quickly formed themselves as he had ordered, working to cut off the monstrous beast's escape.
Barbed tail swishing back and forth, the cat stepped toward its foes. The eyes went from man to man, studying each.
"What's that thing doin'?"
"Maybe it's deciding who to eat next?"
"Silence in the ranks!" Kentril demanded. The beast paused in its study of the others to take special care in viewing him. Captain Dumon met the inhuman gaze and, despite his inner fears, matched it.
At last, it proved to be the creature who looked away first. It slowly backed up, almost as if intending to return to the building from whence it had come.
That could not be allowed. Kentril knew better than to follow any foe back into his lair. Worse, if the cat escaped, it would likely catch them again later, when their guards were down. "Albord! Oskal! You and—"
With another horrific cry, the cat suddenly crouched, then leapt for him.
Kentril had no time to recover. Claws flared from the paws of the monster, the same razor—sharp sickles that had ripped to bloody gobbets two of his men. He saw his ownterrible death coming and knew that his reactions would be too slow even to delay the dire event.
Then a form as much a shadow as the beast met the cat in midair. Although smaller, the second hit with such force that both fell directly to the street.