Elizabeth Mortimer, called Kate Percy (
tiltingwithlips) wrote2012-11-14 10:36 am
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The Battle of Shrewsbury [Werewolf AU]
The day of the battle dawns cloudy and cold. The men on both sides form up as the sun rises behind the clouds, facing each other across a field of gray snow in orderly ranks.
When battle is joined, most semblance of that order disintegrates. The leaders of each army range here and there about the field, directing their troops, and soon the snow is churned and brown with mud and blood.
Most of the soldiers are too busy fighting for their lives to notice the gray wolf creeping around the edges of the battlefield, crouched low to the ground, her hackles raised and lips pulled back in a snarl. Kate has never seen a battle. It's not exactly what she was expecting.
When battle is joined, most semblance of that order disintegrates. The leaders of each army range here and there about the field, directing their troops, and soon the snow is churned and brown with mud and blood.
Most of the soldiers are too busy fighting for their lives to notice the gray wolf creeping around the edges of the battlefield, crouched low to the ground, her hackles raised and lips pulled back in a snarl. Kate has never seen a battle. It's not exactly what she was expecting.
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At long, long last she has him at the edge of the tree, and she stops there, panting. Is the battle ending or simply moving away? She can't tell.
She bends her head and licks Harry's cheek. It's all the comfort she can think to give him right now.
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A sound behind them makes her turn.
And who should be clambering to his feet and trying to sneak across the clearing but one fat, armored fool name of Sir John Falstaff?
When he spies her, he freezes. "A-avaunt! Avaunt, I say!" He makes a hasty Sign of the Cross. "Take thy Hotspur, and to Hell with him -- but I am an honest man, unless to be fat be sin--"
Kate curls her lips and snarls at him, beginning to stalk forward.
"Avaunt!" Falstaff tries again. The wolf snaps its jaws, and Falstaff abruptly decides that devils and demons are surely better left to priests than to him. And that being the case, he had better go find a priest as quickly as possible.
Kate barks once after him as he turns tail, slipping in the mud, and flees.
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The Prince of Wales, thanks be to God, has found his brother, John of Lancaster, and both hobble over the field toward King Henry's camp. John frowns, not only at Hal's weight slung about his shoulders, but at the figure that swift approaches. "Did you not tell me this fat man was dead?"
"I did," says Hal slowly, staring. "I saw him dead, breathless and bleeding on the ground." He halts, and hails the monstrous knight, moving at speed towards them. "Art thou alive? I prithee, speak: we will not trust our eyes without our ears!"
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John still looks extremely dubious and unimpressed.
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Falstaff is suddenly uncharacteristically serious, peering at Hal.
"I fought today with none other than the devil come to drag Percy to his reward."
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"To say a thing is the devil, Jack, is a grave undertaking."
John's brow furrows deeper. "What's this?"
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Hal sighs. "I met a beast when I felled Percy. My armor is the proof, though I think more it was his flesh it was after."
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"It came at me, I say, and I stood firm. When it saw I would not be moved, it roared again, and let me never touch another drop of sack if the ground itself did not split before me! Oh, such a sight would harrow any man, but I say it would do many a man's soul good to see whither he might be taken if he stray from righteousness, as did that foul rebel Percy. For into that dreadful crack did the beast descend, and with Percy in its jaws -- and when the crack closed, why, I thanked the Lord that gave my arm the strength to rid England of such a villain."
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John blinks. "This is the strangest tale that ever I heard."
Hal hangs his head and laughs softly. "This is the strangest fellow, brother John." He gives Falstaff a long-suffering smile. "Why then, that's Percy dispensed, and Falstaff reformed. If the Hotspur be too tiresome for Hell and its devils to bear, perhaps we may look to see if he's been tossed back. But I think he must be gone, if Sir John speaks any truth in his life."
Under his light tone, though, lingers something uneasy, itching like the skin beneath his boots.
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He side-eyes Falstaff. "When the Lord gave thee strength to rid us of the rebel? Strength so great that a demon dared not engage thee?"
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"Even so, Hal, even so!"
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"Nay, Hal, by my troth -- it is as unholy a place as any I have been. Do not speak of going back again."
For once, he sounds absolutely serious, without any of his usual bravado.
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