Arwin hurled himself to the side as the Wyrm’s jaws slammed shut on the air where he’d been moments before. He dismissed Verdant Blaze as he hit the ground, rolling and sprinting toward Jessen. The Wyrm snapped at him, forcing Arwin to skid to a halt to avoid running right into its jaws. Its huge tail whipped around and he pushed [Scourge]’s power into his legs and bounded onto its back. Before he could try to throw himself off at Jessen, the creature thrashed like a startled cat. Arwin flew off and hit the ground with a pained grunt. Shit. This is really bad. He didn’t harbor any delusions as to his abilities. If he and all the others had been working together, there was a chance they’d be able to take out a Wyrm – but their plan had always been to try and take one monster out while it had been weakened and then move to the other. Jessen wasn’t going to let that happen. Arwin couldn’t turn his back on him and the Wyrm breathing down his neck – and even if the other Wyrm was clearly weakened, their group had been split. Arwin’s magical energy started to dwindle as he drew on [Scourge] to stay ahead of the monster. He managed to land a powerful blow on its head with Verdant Blaze, but a blade of black magic streaking through the air in his direction forced him to dive to the side before he could press the advantage. Jessen had positioned himself out of the range of the helmet's aura and could use his magic freely again – and there was absolutely nothing Arwin could do to get closer to him. Whenever he tried, the Wyrm forced him back. Arwin gritted his teeth as he desperately searched for an opportunity. The gem in his armor hummed with power absorbed from all of Jessen’s magic, but he needed an opportunity to actually get close enough to the guildmaster to actually use it. The Wyrm roared. It bore down on them, a stampeding wall of scales and muscle. Reya’s brow knitted in concentration as she did her best to ignore the monster just seconds away from her. Energy crackled through her body and arced out as she activated [Spectral Binding] on one of the fallen Wyrmlings that she’d helped kill. Olive threw her shoulder into Reya, tossing her back just in time to keep the Wyrm’s tail from taking her head off. She hit the ground with a pained grunt and sprung back to her feet. “What are you doing?” Olive yelled. “Pay fucking attention!” A translucent blue Wyrmling rose from the dead monster’s body and threw its head back, letting out a loud hiss. It picked up on Reya’s desires and lunged at its former mother, scrambling onto its back and digging at the bigger monster’s eyes. “Sorry,” Reya said breathlessly, her heart hammering in her chest. “It was faster than I thought it was.” The Wyrm roared, shaking its head back and forth furiously. The ghostly Wyrmling really wasn’t doing much damage, but it was an effective distraction. Another roar slipped out of the Wyrm – but this one was pained. It staggered, one of its legs buckling beneath it for a second. The monster’s eyes flashed bright pink and it caught itself. It rose once more, its lips pulling back to reveal rows of jagged teeth dripping with blood. “What in the Nine Underlands? How strong is your ability?” Olive asked, her eyes wide. “I don’t think that’s me,” Reya muttered. The glow in the Wyrm’s eyes faded and it thrashed, throwing its head back and letting out another scream. Reya’s ghostly Wyrmling flew from its back and hit the ground with a thud. Another flash of energy wrapped around the Wyrm’s head and it lowered its gaze once more, focusing on them again. “It’s sick,” Olive said. “There’s something wrong with that Wyrm, and I don’t think it was laying a bunch of Wyrmling eggs and sitting on top of them.” “Maybe Jessen did something to it?” Reya asked nervously. The Wyrm was staring them down, but it didn’t seem like it had managed to muster the energy to strike. That meant little. Reya recognized the look in the monster’s eyes. She’d seen it many times before– almost exclusively on the features of the people and animals that hadn’t survived the streets. The desperation of a cornered animal with absolutely nothing left to lose. The courage that a plague-stricken rat would draw upon to bite at the nose of a cat bearing down on it, even though its death had already been written in stone. Even though its body was drooping and it was nearly laying flat on the ground, there was fight left within its soul. There’s no way a Wyrm would feel that, right? It’s the strongest monster in the entire area. “If it’s this injured, I can find an opening. Stay back. I’ll handle this,” Olive said, lowering her sword and sprinting toward the monster before Reya could say anything. Reya held a hand out to stop Olive, but no words came out of her mouth. The other woman was a better warrior. Her attacks could do as much as Arwin’s if she had the proper setup. If anyone could kill the Wyrm while Lillia was distracted, it was her. I’m just a street rat with a class that Arwin basically handed to me. Olive knows what she’s doing. The Wyrm’s body tensed – the same way it did before it attacked with its tail. Reya’s body moved before her mind could hold it back. A flash of blue slammed into Olive. The swordswoman froze in place and the Wyrm’s tail whipped out, headed straight for her. At the same time, the translucent Wyrmling lunged from where it had fallen. It threw itself into Olive, throwing her back, taking the blow from the tail itself. It shattered into shimmering fragments of light and Olive hit the ground with a grunt, skidding to a stop just a few feet in front of Reya. “I’m sorry,” Reya stammered. “I–” “You just saved my ass,” Olive said, jabbing her sword into the ground and pushing herself up to her feet. “How did you know the Wyrm was going to do that? It looked like it was about to pass out.” “I just did,” Reya said lamely. The Wyrm screamed again, pushing itself back to its feet as the pink energy wrapping around its skull grew brighter still. They both spun toward the huge monster and it took a laborious step toward them, its breath coming out in ragged hisses. Reya shot a glance over her shoulder, but Rodrick and Lillia were still locked in their own fights. At the center of the clearing, Arwin was somehow holding his own against the other Wyrm, but he was losing ground. There was no help coming. “Any more premonitions?” Olive asked, adjusting her grip on her sword.
