
foes.
Meanwhile, Will pulled his warsling from his belt. It seemed a poor weapon
with which to fight long odds at close quarters, just as the halfling himself
looked puny compared to the human scoundrels, but if Will was frightened, Kara
couldn't tell it. He grinned as if relishing the chance to prove his mettle.
"Kill them," Mandal said.
The outlaws charged, and as they scrambled forward, they changed.
The transformation happened fast. Still, Kara glimpsed thin, black-gray fur
spreading over skin, faces jutting into bestial snouts, front teeth swelling
into chisel-like incisors, whiskers and thin, hairless tails springing into
being. In an instant, her captors, though still scuttling on two legs and
capable of gripping weapons, had cast off a goodly portion of their humanity
to become a mix of man and rodent.
The transformation from man to wererat dispelled any lingering doubts Kara
might have had as to whether Mandal and his cronies truly did mean to hurt
her. She had to help the strangers fight on her behalf. She groggily heaved
herself to her feet, called a spell to mind, and an earthen jug smashed
against her forehead.
One of the ratmen had seen her rise and had thrown the missile at her. She
collapsed to the floor in a shower of shards and pungent spirit. Stunned, she
tried to flounder onto all fours, but her limbs wouldn't obey her. She could
only lie and watch the fight unfold.
Her would-be rescuers looked unfazed by the ratmen's metamorphosis. Dorn
stood motionless as the shapeshifters rushed him, then, just as they were
about to close, he sprang forward. It was remarkable that such a hulking,
heavily-armored man could pounce so quickly, and it caught the wererats by
surprise. He swung his fist in a backhand blow, and the knuckle spikes on the
gauntlet crunched into a lycan-thrope's skull. Evidently the iron glove was
enchanted, for the creature's normal resistance to any but silver weapons did
nothing to protect it. Flung backward, it sprawled inert, its head bloody and
battered out of shape.
Three more shapeshifters hacked and stabbed at Dorn. It seemed inevitable
that one of them would penetrate the big man's guard, but he swept the
gauntlet back and forth, blocking and parrying the attacks, for as long as it
took to bull his way out of the center of his remaining foes. That
accomplished, he came back on guard as he had before, armored hand extended
before him, sword poised behind.
Kara peered to see if Will was faring as well. For a moment, she failed to
spot the little halfling himself, just the three ratmen scrambling in pursuit.
That was because he was taking evasive action, dodging behind or ducking under
furniture, using his size to his advantage, making it difficult for his
screeching, chattering, manifestly frustrated foes to close with him. Indeed,
he was so adept at the tactic that for a moment, they lost track of him all
together. As they crouched to look under one table, he leaped on top of
another, then gave a piercing whistle. They lifted their heads, and he spun
the warsling. Kara didn't see the stone fly, but it was obvious from the way
two of the lycanthropes jerked that the missile had hit one, then skipped to
strike the other.
Swords raised, beady scarlet eyes blazing, the ratmen rushed forward. Will
stood his ground long enough to hurl another rock, which made a double crack
as it impacted not just one skull but two. Evidently, like Dorn's gauntlet,
the stones were enchanted, for one shapeshifter swayed and crumpled sideways,
overturning a rickety chair as it fell.
Alas, that still left two assailants who finally lunged close enough to
strike. Will, however, somersaulted off the edge of the table before the
leaping blades could touch him. He landed on the floor as neatly as a tumbler
in a carnival, then ran. Tails dragging through the sawdust, the ratmen
scuttled after.
By then, Dorn's gauntlet was bloody from claw-tips to wrist, evidence of
the vicious efficiency with which he employed it. He snatched, and a ratman