Implacable.
"Kill her," she said, waving a palp at the slaver.
Until it was seen, it was hard to believe that a gukuy as huge as Nukurren
could move so fast. Before the crowd could even whistle with fear, Nukurren
drew her fork and slammed it into the slaver's mantle. Driven by Nukurren's
great strength, the two razor-sharp bronze prongs were driven completely
through the ganahide armor and the tough cartilage of the mantle. With a twist
of her palps on the crossbar of the hook, Nukurren flipped the slaver onto her
side. The slaver's two tentacles clutched at the hook in a hopeless attempt to
pry it loose. The six arms clustered about her beak were knotted in pain.
The killing stroke which followed struck the slaver like a lightning bolt. The
blow drove the flail-blades deep into the unarmored soft tissue of the
slaver's underbelly. With a great jerk, the slaver's bowels were ripped out
and scattered about the ground in a spray of blood. Pieces of gut spattered
the crowd. With another quick twist of her right tentacle Nukurren tossed the
corpse of the slaver aside, freeing the prongs of her fork.
She squatted down on her peds and began cleaning the fork and the flail with a
sponge. Around her she could hear the crowd whistling loudly. It was not the
death of the slaver which shocked them, she knew. They were as callous a group
of gukuy as you could find anywhere on the Meat of the Clam. It was the manner
of it -- the incredible display of ferocity, speed and strength. Many warriors
boasted of being able to deal the kutaku, the single death-blow, but it was
rarely accomplished in actual fact.
"And her gray never wavered," Nukurren heard one mercenary whisper with awe.
She found some consolation in that comment, to counteract the great wave of
revulsion which flowed through her. Not a trace of her feelings showed in her
mantle, but she had to fight not to vomit. She concentrated on cleaning her
weapons, slowly and meticulously.
I'm not even sickened by the killing, she thought wearily. The stinking slaver
deserved it. No, it's the sickness of my whole life. I think Dhowifa's right.
But I just can't find any comfort in his dukuna.
By the time she finished cleaning her weapons, the crowd had disappeared. The
body of the slaver was still lying to one side. The pool of blood surrounding
it had soaked into the soil. Scavengers were already approaching the corpse.
Within a day, the body would be a festering mass of corruption, filled with
slugs, snails, worms and larvae.
Typical slavers, thought Nukurren with disgust. Well, if they're not going to
bother giving her the rites, I'm certainly not.
She rose and began walking toward her yurt. A soft hoot from the cage stopped
her. Turning back, Nukurren saw that the hunnakaku was now standing at the
front of the cage, staring at her through the bars. The hunnakaku hooted
again.
Long ago, after their escape from Shakutulubac, Nukurren and Dhowifa had spent
many eightweeks living with the Kiktu. Nukurren had gotten along well with the
tribespeople, but Dhowifa's pampered existence in the Palace had not prepared
him for the hardships of barbarian life. So when the old Paramount Mother
died, and the fury of the hunt for her escaped consort died with her, Dhowifa
had insisted on returning to civilization. Nukurren had not been unwilling,
for though she liked the Kiktu, she found their religious beliefs bizarre. And
their dietary fetishes and restrictions had been annoying.
But while she was among them, Nukurren had been careful to observe the
proprieties. She had even learned some of the strange language spoken by the
hunnakaku. For the Kiktu believed that the sub-gukuy were sacred. They called
the hunnakaku the Old Ones, and believed that they were the first people
created by their goddess Uk when she rained life upon the Meat. They were
favored still in her eyes, the Kiktu believed, and their language was
difficult to understand because it was holy. All Kiktu learned to speak it --