For each bandit which fled Snowy’s wrath, a wall of sharp-spined creepers awaited. That didn’t stop them from trying. The serrated leaves, the thorn-studded vines—with a sword in hand, as many of these bandits had, the wall did not seem insurmountable. All around the Eastern side men began to chop and hack at the thorns, seeking escape. Oh, drat. Bradwynne’s not there to cover that quadrant, Janet realized belatedly and stood up. It meant leaving her post unguarded, but right now it was her job to keep the perimeter locked down, and if there was an Eastern breach she had to be there!
It took but a whistle to her mount and a few seconds to pull herself into the saddle before the chestnut mare was off, trotting rapidly along the hissing, crackling barrier to the place where Janet could hear shouts and vines snapping. In several places here the bandits were attempting to breach the wall—she saw an axe crash through, flattening blackberry vines, and two men struggle out.
What they found was Janet on her brown horse, arriving on the scene. What they wanted was the mount—to escape this place they needed speed, and on horseback the clones and the monster which had harried them could be outrun. They drew their weapons and advanced on Janet, shouting.
“Eeeeek!” Her scream filtered through the encampment like morning sunlight. She’d never fought from horseback. Janet wheeled Rebel around, her greatshield drawn and attempting to protect that side of the horse from her assailants. Thankfully, the crudely hewn block of oak was strong against blades—the axes and blade-edges hardly flaked off the bark, never mind sundering the defensive weapon. “Get back!” Here, in melee range without her own two feet on the ground, Janet had no way to defend herself. She could only hold the men at bay as more crashed through her vines and surged towards her, grabbing at the reins, drawing blood along Rebel’s flanks.
“Get away!” Janet shrilled, tightening her grip on the shield desperately. Despite her power and potential, the girl’s inexperience in battle was showing. Without her team close around her, she had little to no offensive abilities, and there were now too many of them for strangleweed-pods to be effective against. Six men now clustered around her. Janet screamed again as the saddle jerked and Rebel kicked out, but the bandits shouted a warning to one another and jumped back.
Her nature magic spread in her hands. Branches burst from the crown of her shield like a tentacle eruption, their leaves as black as the wood was stained red. The limbs extended and Janet swung the shield like a broom, sweeping up the bandits on Rebel’s right side like crumpled paper balls. With a loud scrape and scream, the men harassing her were laid out prone. “Back where you came from!” Janet cried as they went sprawling, and the one unfortunate still tangled in the tree limbs went flying into the air. He crashed back down in the wall of thorns.
Given room to move finally, Janet nudged Rebel and the horse took off, charging back down the line. The men went running as the naturamancer came flying down the wall to the rhythm of horse-hooves, shield held out at an angle. "Faster, Rebel!” she called, bouncing her heels on her mount's sides. The chestnut mare whinnied in joy, putting on the speed. Each bandit who cut his way free of the vines was scooped up and hurled back into the camp like weeds from a garden spade as Janet made her loop, red-faced from exertion. “Per...perimeter secure,” she messaged the others via sticky sticker, a little short of breath.
Last edited: May 18, 2018