Expedition [Urk Climax #1]: The Long Watch

The combined assault on its heels and head proved to be too much for the monstrous shrew; the bash from Vilde's shield and the slash from Kaii's polearm, which caught at and unhinged the beast's jaw, left it perfectly exposed for Finn to slash open his jugular. Blood sprayed wildly as the shrew thrashed about, kicking the still-prone Tultow in the face as it flailed and leaving him stunned and seeing stars. The last thing he saw before darkness was the massive beast finally collapsing atop him.

The other shrews, seeing their champion fall, hesitated, and then started to fall back into the mist. It was a controlled retreat, not a route; they went still firing arrows toward the camp, but they were at least taking a reprieve to regroup.
 
Void, nothingness, those were the only things Kaii experienced when the giant shrew fell. No glory, happiness, nothing. He took a look around at his comrades at arms to ensure they were all there and not wounded. And since they were, he just accepted he did what he was meant to.

But the shrews didn't run away. They merely retreated. As his mind started thinking again, he knew he had to prepare something for their return. But before Kaii could form any reasonable plans, he yelped with pain as it burned through him like hot iron. Holding it for too much finally came back to bite him in the tail.

He managed still to take out his glaive from this beast's snout before he just collapsed onto the mud. Unable to move from the suffering anymore.

But it was a necessary pain. One he took so the others didn't. One that he potentially saved from those he promised to protect. Most importantly, one that reminded him he was still alive.

Looking into the sky he was happy it was this cold. It made him feel better, and he was decently suited for it too. Almost felt like homeland... even if it wasn't.

"I... need a doctor." Kaii managed to state into the air before yelping in pain again. He wasn't sure what was worse. The pain itself or the fact it was now coming in overwhelmingly sweeping waves along other emotions.

Closing his eyes he focused on leveling
his breath. It hurt too. A loud curse flew from his snout. Oh how he hated feeling things again.

But at the same time, he couldn't fathom living the way he just fought. He didn't have anyone when he did. And now at least he had friends. Ones he now fiercely was trying to not go unconscious for, even if it would save him from the suffering.
 
Last edited:
The champion shrew fell.

Finny’s voice cut through the chaos like a bell, sharp, triumphant. The battlefield shifted in a heartbeat. The remaining shrews faltered, then turned, their formation crumbling in retreat. Some still raining down arrows as they backed away. The fury of the fight thinned, replaced by distant shouting and the heavy beat of retreating paws.

Swifttail stood motionless for a moment, sword still half-raised. His chest heaved with each breath. Only now did he realize how hard he’d been pushing. How the cold had crept back in; how his legs shook from exertion.

He looked down at himself. No wounds. Just the persistent throb of his broken paw, cradled protectively against his chest, and deep exhaustion settling like a weight across his shoulders.

He turned just in time to see Kaii fall. Swifttail was moving before he thought to, sword falling to the snow as he dropped beside the pale-furred fox. His good paw found Kaii’s shoulder, shaking gently.

“Hey...hey! Kaii?”

He turned, eyes scanning the battlefield until they landed on Finnian.

“Finny! Help!”
 
Finn clung tightly to the shrew as it toppled forwards, teeth clenched, and eyes wide as saucers. His knife served as a good anchor point right until the moment of impact, and the young foxkit bounced free onto the cold tundra. His ears rang as he scrambled to his feet, senses suffering from the rush of adrenaline and violence. Is it dead? The kit stared numbly at the brute, and carefully gave it a little kick to the head to see if it would stir -- but it lay in a motionless heap, blood pouring out from it's neck.

Slowly, his senses started to return to him, and Finn looked about the battlefield. Someone was calling his name. "Swifttail!" he cried triumphantly -- though his joy was shortlived. Kaii looked in rough shape, as did Silvie. Stowing his knife, the fox made for the trio before tripping over something in the dirt.

Tultow's arm.

Finn froze, and shot a glance back towards Swifttail and Kaii. There were more beasts needing help than he could manage by himself. Barrett's training on handling triage simply fizzled in his mind -- and not knowing what was right to do, he chose to try and rescue Tultow. Helplessly, he strained away at the dead beast.

"H-hey! Can you help me?" he asked, looking to Vilde with fear in his eyes.
 
Swifttail’s ears twitched with hope as Finnian turned his way, only to watch, helpless, as the young fox pivoted instead toward the massive corpse of the fallen shrew.

“No...wait...”

But Finn was already gone. And moments later, Silvertongue rushed after him.

Swifttail stood frozen. The battlefield had shifted again, and with it, so had everyone’s focus. His breath hitched, panic rising in his chest like steam in a closed pipe. Not anger. Just fear. Crushing, helpless fear.

He looked down. Kaii lay too still. Swifttail bent low again, gripping the marble-furred fox’s shoulder with his good paw, voice hushed and cracking.

“You’re strong, Kaii. Fight it. I can’t help ye’ alone, but I’m going to get help!”

And then he ran. The snow blurred beneath his feet, his breath sharp as he pushed forward. Every step felt slower than the last. But eventually—there they were. Finn. Silvertongue. Vilde. All gathered at the side of the fallen beast.

And then he saw it.

An arm. Limp. Pale fur matted beneath the collapsed weight of the monster they had slain. Swifttail’s breath caught.

“Tultow...”

The word barely left his muzzle. His legs buckled slightly, and his paw came up to his muzzle as tears welled over.

Still gasping, he forced the words out:

“Kaii’s hurt...he’s bleeding out. I...I tried t’ help, but I...”
“...Tultow’s gone.”
 
Silvertongue froze in place as he heard those words come from Swifttail. “You don’t know that!” He said- he almost shouted it, his eyes filled with despair. “Swift- I know Kaii is bleeding- but Tultow- he’s suffocating under there! We don’t know if a beast is gone until we see it with our own eyes.”

Silvertongue shook his head. “No, if we just left him here- I’d barely get any sleep, knowing there was something we could have done.”

He stepped forward, putting his free paw on Swifttails paw, his eyes mournful. “There’s no length I wouldn’t go, if it was you I had to save. I can only hope… that for me, you’d do the same…”

He then turned away, leaning down once more and trying to push the beast aside with his good arm.
 
In other circumstances Vilde might have stopped to roar a victory cheer. Unfortunately, her best hope for joining up with these likely Imperium sailors had just got squashed. Several of the foxes were injured, too, the fires of battle abandoning them, seemingly along with some of their senses. The little one pleaded for her help amid the groans of the others. The strange one who had been fighting with a musical instrument came over and attempted to calm the smaller fox.

As they made to shift the shrew, the wildcat made for action first. Slotting her shield onto her back harness, axe swiftly into her belt, she stooped and attempted to heave the great half-flaming lump away. As she strained to lift the creature from Tultow, she called to Finnian.

“Little one, see if he lives.”

She then addressed Swifttail and Silvertongue in succession.

“Whichever of the two of you is strongest, help your friend to tent.” Vilde spoke of Kaii. “The other help me with this.”

They did not have to listen, she knew that, but not being part of their crew yet and with a commanding officer in trouble, she took it upon herself to try.​
 
Last edited:
Tultow couldn't breathe. He could only manage short little wheezes, unable to get a lungful of air. It was, it turned out, an awful way to go. He couldn't call for help, he couldn't move or push the beast off of him, not with that awfully heavy shell pinning him down. He could hear muffled voices outside, beasts gathered around the fallen monster, but he couldn't signal to them. If only...

He flopped his paw on the ground, ignoring the pain and discomfort of the shell digging into his wrist, the loss of sensation that was beginning to set in as his circulation was cut off. He focused on the military distress code, the series of short and long pauses, trying to let those outside know that he was alive.
 
Silvertongue’s voice struck like a lash. Swifttail flinched visibly, his ears pinning back. His breath caught, but he didn’t argue. Couldn’t. The words weren’t cruel. They were honest. Brutally so.

He hadn’t even thought Tultow might be alive. He just assumed the worst! Shame crawled up his neck and into his chest, hot and cold all at once. The battlefield had numbed his sense of consequence. He’d looked at a limp arm and made a call. But Silvertongue was right. That wasn’t his call to make.

Swifttail met Silvie’s eyes just briefly. His own were wide, wounded. He mouthed the word “sorry”... a small, broken whisper that never left his throat. Then he turned with his head low and his tail lowered.

He followed the big wildcat’s direction, weaving through the snow-streaked wreckage of the field until he found a marine, a skinny weasel with a scuffed uniform and a bloodied sleeve.

“Please,” Swifttail said quietly. “My friend... he’s hurt bad. I can’t move him on my own.”

The weasel didn’t speak. He just nodded.

Together, they made their way back to Kaii.

Swifttail knelt at the marble fox’s side again, paw trembling as he reached down and gave his shoulder a gentle shake.

“Kaii? Can y’ hear me?”
 
Kaii could hear his comrade speaking. More so, he felt it. His touch adding to the burning pain within.

He whined and curse before managing to speak. "Yes. For now."

Having no energy left to thrash or even squirm in pain, the marble fox lied there, sharply focused on staying conscious. He wasn't afraid of dying, he just knew it wasn't yet his time. Too much he still owed to his family and now to his friends.

So while unable to move to not provoke any more pain, Kaii stared into the sky. Trying his best to focus on the fleeting thoughts about the stars beyond the clouds. He was almost sure he heard the voice of his sister, talking about them.

Arie was dead however, yet another reason to keep going. She was last beast Kaii wished to fail.
 
Darragh’s paws were trembling. The noise of battle to him had seemed like the screams and cries of the underworld itself, but somehow the lull in the action was worse. At least in battle, his fighting instincts could take over, and he could trust the heavy cutlass that had been thrust into his paws. Anybeast short and ugly enough was the Enemy, and anybeast that looked utterly bewildered, lost, frightened and hurt tended to be a friend. Now the shrews had retreated though, and Darragh couldn’t be sure if the battle was over, or if the torchlit silhouettes stumbling in the fog were friend or foe. Everywhere there were moans of pain, or cries of loss.

Darragh took a moment to check himself, half-convinced he’d been gutted without realising it. A stoat could never do too terribly at footwork, and Darragh’s spritely step had kept him dodging thrust after blow. His lithe figure had proven almost impossible to hit, but having such scrawny arms had not made him much of a killer either. Holding his cutlass two-handed, he had been hewing at the shrews as though he was harvesting wheat, and though he had chopped a few spearheads and the odd limb off for his trouble, his wild swings had been fairly easy to predict and avoid. He desperately needed more combat training, but his brief time at sea had been crammed with learning a whole new trade and way of life. He’d gotten in a few whacks with wooden training swords, but this battle was about the best practical lesson he’d had so far.

Earlier that day, Darragh had tripped, and fallen out of the longboat as he’d been coming ashore. Soaked and spluttering, he’d been the target of guffaws and mocking applause. He’d stripped off his sopping wet sailor’s coat and hung it to dry, and given his crumpled hat a good squeeze. One of the younger marines had taken pity on him, and let him borrow one of his spare coats as night fell and the chill set in. Darragh had fought in the borrowed coat, easily mistaken for a marine at a distance, though his fighting style was anything but soldierly. Now, the coat’s owner might be dead, and Darragh hadn’t even asked his name.

Perhaps he sowed his initials into the collar, Darragh thought.

Satisfied his innards were intact, Darragh stood in a daze. For the past few weeks in the Navy, there had not been a moment where he hadn’t been doing something under orders. Now there were no barks of command, piping of whistles or rattling of drums. For a moment, Darragh drifted in the uneasy freedom of having nobeast telling him what to do. That might have suited him on a sunny afternoon, but it was unnerving in this roiling mass of murky fog and blood freezing on the ground.

“Please, my friend... he’s hurt bad. I can’t move him on my own.”

Darragh nodded dumbly, and followed the fox. In the gloom and the haze of battle, he didn’t even really register who was speaking. He was led to another fox, who Darragh might have taken as dead, if he weren’t able to speak in pained tones. This fox had beautiful marble fur, and a well-made glaive lay beside him.

An officer? Oh… it’s Nashirou, the engineer, Darragh realised, with a pang of worry making his stomach tremble. He’s not a bad sort, we really need foxes like him.

The stoat knelt, and prepared to shift the wounded fox. He grimaced, unhappy with the suffering he was about to cause. There was no way around it - moving Nashirou was bound to be painful.

Hang on, we’ve got ye,” Darragh murmured, attempting a soothing tone, though his breath was ragged after the fight. “You’ll live to be feelin’ this in the mornin’, I’m afraid so.
 
As the beasts of the Hide suffered, recovered, or simply tried to stay alive or otherwise, a loud demonic howl broke through the sounds of battle and the whimpering of the wounded, carried across the entire island by the fierce winds.
“AWOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!”

The Urk shrews, for their part, froze their orderly retreat for a moment, and then, in an eerie unison to remind the beasts who had dared to trespass on their home that the reprieve was only temporary, repeated the howl, albeit much more subdued than the original one.

“AWOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!”

This second howl, though weaker, was carried by a worryingly high amount of voices. It was a stark reminder that the beasts of the Imperium would have to either save their leader or find another one to rally behind...and soon.
 
Finn strained to try and move the corpse of the behemoth, but even with Vilde's assistance it proved near impossible to budge. The foxkit's panicked expression grew desperate, and his efforts became frantic. It didn't take much effort to imagine that Tultow couldn't breathe beneath the weight of the shell -- gates, Finn knew how hard it was to breathe when somebeast sat on him while wrestling. Seeing Tultow's forearm tapping against the shell, the foxkit grabbed his paw and pulled with all his might.

"Tultow! Tultow, we're coming! Hang on!" he cried, as a few more crewbeasts began to join the effort.

As the mournful howl echoed across through the mountains, Finn squeezed his eyes shut, and clenched Tultow's paw tightly. As far as he was concered, that was the wail of death itself -- and it wasn't far off. The foxkit's fur bristled, and he hunkered down against the behemoth. "C'mon, c'mon we gotta get him free NOW!" he urged the assembled crewbeasts.

Gates, he just couldn't do this all on his own.
 
Last edited:
Silvertongue shivered as he heard the deathly howls. He turned to face the fallen behemoth. Only his left arm was functional, but he crouched down and he started to lift with all his might. Finny was right. Right now, they needed leadership. He wanted nothing more than to whisk Finn away and comfort the poor kit. At least, he did. In the back of his head. The kind, caring Silvertongue was locked away, within the same recesses of his mind that the darkness had lingered, and now the darkness had burst forth, like a bubbling well of anger. There was no time for comforting, only action.
 
Last edited:
Kaii stirred.

Swifttail’s breath caught, and then eased, just slightly. Relief flooded his chest like thawed water through cracked ice. The fox was still with them. Still fighting.

“There y’are…” he murmured, brushing Kaii’s shoulder with a trembling paw. “Stay with us.”

With a nod to the lean weasel beside him, still mistaken for a marine. They began to lift Kaii together. Swifttail looped his good arm around the marble fox’s back, cradling him gently while the weasel took the opposite side. It was a clumsy carry, awkward and uneven, but it was working.

They made it several paces toward the infirmary before the sound came.

The howl.

It wasn’t natural. It wasn’t right. It cut through the battlefield like a blade dipped in frost. The sound reached into Swifttail’s spine and yanked something loose.

He froze, eyes wide. The sword was gone, but he felt like he should be clutching something...Anything!

“Hell’s gates…”

Then he surged forward, dragging Kaii with renewed desperation.

“Go faster, go faster!” he barked at the weasel, his voice cracking with panic.

Kaii jolted in his grasp, the movement rougher than intended. Swifttail winced.

“Sorry! Sorry, hold on, just a bit further...”

But the fear was in his blood now, and slowing down wasn’t an option.
 
As Vilde, Finn, and a few of the marines gathered to push the shrew off Tultow, he felt his world going back. Light flooded back in along with air as his lungs were finally able to expand - and immediately he regretted that rescue as his ribcage protested the action. "Medic," he gasped, his voice hoarse. "My chest."
 
Finn knelt closely by the shell, and kept a stabilizing paw on it to watch for when Tultow was free. All the while, he kept a firm grip on Tultow's paw, and called out to him to let him know he'd be free soon. The instant there was enough room to slip him out, Finn dug his heels into the tundra and pulled, dragging the stoat's crumpled body free. "H-hey, Tultow! Whatcha doin' under there? Y'aren't supposed to nap under a shrew!" he said as playfully as he could muster. He looked nervously to Vilde, then to Silvertongue, and over to the infirmary tent a short distance away. "He needs to get to Mr. Barrett -- can you help me carry him?"
 
Back
Top