This is the third and last scene from Earthfire. Baba Yaga appears in the second half; I've included the preceding events for full context.
The road led from the forest into more open country, but it remained little better than a track, twisting between hedges and hillocks much of the time, and Yastreb grew uneasy. It seemed to be the right country for ambushes.
Two hours in, with little said between them, and there were no others using the road, and scarcely any farms or hamlets visible; certainly there were no villages of any kind.
He mentioned his thoughts to Radul, who gave him a puzzled look. - I thought you’d prefer things this way. -
He did not respond. What was in his mind was that Zabelushka could have come with them.
No-one would have noticed her, in this countryside…
Radul seized his arm. - Quiet! -
There was a wailing scream that ended abruptly.
- You heard that? - the veteran demanded as Yastreb reached for an arrow.
The road ahead bent slightly to the right, around a stand of three oak trees. Radul whispered, urgently, - It came from the other side of those trees. Stay low and stay silent. -
They darted to the little grove and moved in at a crawl until they could clearly see the farm building beyond; a sturdy stone house, a sizeable wooden barn and a large stable grouped around a stone-walled well; the dwellings of a prosperous family group. Beyond that were broad newly ploughed fields.
Around the well stood a group of men in leather jerkins and brown tunics; seven all told, variously armed with swords, cudgels and axes, save for one toting a crossbow and another with a slung bow.
- Oh no, - whispered Radul. - Red Hand. See there? On their tunics? -
Yastreb felt a deep chill building as he took in the sight of the women and young girls lying sprawled beside the well, bound hand and foot, and the fire burning next to the well, the hay and scraps of wood heaped around the barn, and the cart in front of the barn door.
- They’re going to burn the barn! - Radul went on. - With people inside. The Red Hand are known for that. By the Saviours! What can we do? -
Yastreb put down his bow and took the quiver from his shoulder.
- What are you doing? - Radul said.
Yastreb felt the cold spread through his body, and with it, his senses sharpening. He knew what had to be done. - Take my bow and arrows. Get behind the barn. I am going to draw their attention, get them away from the women and children. When I... when I act, just… just shoot them down. The bow will shoot strongly. - He saw the disbelief on Radul’s face, and went on, - Please... just go, Radul. I know what I have to do. Do’kha. -
Yastreb scrambled back and rose to his feet.
There was no way that he could fight seven Red Hand men when all he had was a sword. He did not trust his skill with a bow enough to risk their lives, and Radul’s crossbow was slow to reload. He had magic, something the bandits did not have, but he could not use Fire because he could not control it; he would burn up everything around him. Air magic would likewise be destructive. Light would achieve little. All that he had to fight with was Beast.
He was accustomed to using his Beast magic in a limited way, to communicate with animals, and to enhance his own senses. There was the spell he had used to hide his and Radul’s scents from hunting dogs. There were other, stronger powers that could be called upon, to change his body form in small ways, such as giving himself claws, whether for fighting or for uses such as climbing. And then there was a spell enabling him to manifest Beast magic in combat, to strike not from arm’s length, but from much further, with deadly effect. Koschei had called that spell the Beast-Strike, and though he had taught it to Yastreb, he had been careful to explain that there were risks in using it.
To manifest the Beast power in that way, to shape and unleash it... you may never be free of the Beast thereafter. Use it rarely, and never for long. You must learn the limits, and remember them.
The Runes whirled, intertwined, and came together behind his eyes. His awareness narrowed as he strode around the trees and towards the farm.
The leader of the Red Hand men was leaning against the well, arms folded, one foot resting on the head of a woman who was sprawled face down in the mud, her hands and feet bound. She was sobbing quietly.
- You’ve all had time enough and more to make your peace, - the leader said casually. - So we’ve got nothing more to do here than plant the seed of king’s men in your wenches as you all burn! So, my lads, in the name of Prince Drago… -
- Hold! - shouted Yastreb.
The Red Hand men spun towards him as he approached slowly, hands by his sides.
- Hear me. Leave this place now, and let the people live, - he said, aware of a new rasp in his voice. - Leave now. -
The leader had a beard and a long moustache in the style of nobles. He sneered just as Sir Fedor would have done, made a show of stroking his moustache, and then chuckled.
- What's this, then, my lads? A hero in a green cloak! A beardless boy to boot! He must be one of Branvok’s pansies! Do you think you’re a Paladin, boy? You are? So, where’s your milk-white war steed and your shining mail coat and your mighty lance, eh? Do you even know how to use a sword? Come on, draw that blade, show us your skill! - He burst into mocking laughter.
The others joined in the mirth, laughing or guffawing.
Yastreb stopped at twenty paces away. He took a deep breath as pain suddenly spiked in his jaws and hands. - I’m giving you one chance, one chance only, to walk away from here with your lives. - The rasp had become stronger, almost a growl... - Do you understand me? This is your last chance. There won’t be another! -
The leader roared with laughter, and there were bellows of mirth from the other Red Hand men as he said, - Ah... break his arms and legs and put him with the others! -
Yastreb raised both hands. He was sick to the stomach… then anger surged, the Runes flared, and he roared, and he struck.
The leader staggered and fell as something tore into his face and ripped through flesh and bone, and the man with the crossbow was slammed back as something smashed into his chest, shattering ribs, and he sprawled in the mud, gasping as blood spilled from his mouth..
Two of the Red Hand Men had started forward at their leader’s command, but they, and all their comrades, froze in shock as their leader was cut down by a weapon none could see, and then they reeled back as Yastreb strode forward.
His hands were long, fur-matted, and clawed like a bear’s, his eyes were blood-red orbs, and his face was twisted in ferocity to something no longer quite Human. A guttural growl surged through bared fangs as murderous rage blazed within him. Any doubt, any thought of mercy, had vanished.
Suddenly the two men who had stepped forward came out of their shock and rushed at him, one with a sword and the other with a poleaxe. The archer drew, notched and stepped to one side to take aim, then suddenly stumbled and collapsed with a crossbow bolt buried deep in his back as the two other men came in at a run.
Yastreb side-stepped into the axeman’s path before the axe fell, his right hand closing around the man’s throat, and he swung around, lifting the gagging axeman up to hurl him into the swordsman, but that one had kept his wits.
As Yastreb released his grip, sending the axeman past the swordsman to crash into the cart by the barn, the sword blurred towards his neck. Yastreb tried to beat the blade aside, but too late, and it tore into his left forearm, slicing flesh until it hit bone…
With a howl he tore his maimed arm free and swung a back-handed blow that slammed into the swordsman’s jaw.
He did not feel or hear the man’s neck snap, and he did not see a raider clutch at the arrow transfixing his neck and slump down, or the last one break and run, heading for the fields, only to fall with an arrow lodged deep in his back. Instead he strode towards the leader, who was trying and failing to stand, crying out incoherently. Four huge gashes had torn away half his face, his nose and his left eye. He could only struggle feebly as Yastreb’s left hand closed around his throat.
Yastreb wrenched the leader up clear of the ground, drove the claws of his right hand under the man’s chin and tore the lower jaw away, roaring in savage triumph as hot blood gushed over his chest and arms…
He heard a scream, and a young woman’s terror broke through the rage to kill.
He let the ruined body drop. His deep breaths were rasping in his throat. The scent of blood was still strong…
- Yastreb! It’s over! Listen to me! You’ve done your duty here! It’s over! -
He turned to look at Radul, and then around at the sprawled bodies, and saw the sheer terror in the face of a young woman staring up at him.
- Come back! It’s done! - Radul stepped forward, one hand raised placatingly. - You’ve saved the people here. It’s over. Come back, youngster. Please. - His voice was shaking, but somehow his hand was steady. - Just… come back. Please. -
Yastreb felt the pain of his wounded arm, and grabbed it frantically to staunch the bleeding as weakness swept over him. He slumped to his knees beside the girl.
- I’m sorry… I’m sorry, - he whimpered as he felt his body returning to normal.
- He’s a decent lad, - Radul said, - and that’s the truth. But there’s something that… well, no-one knows what. The mark of the beast, some called it. The red rage, some others said. But Gods be thanked, his heart is pure. If it wasn’t, well, you saw, young miss. But he knew who deserved to die and he stopped when they were beaten. -
Yastreb sat in one corner, stripped to the waist, washing the blood from his face and hair. His arm was bandaged, and his tunic and undershirt were being washed. No-one sat near him.
The bodies had been gathered up and buried once the wounded Red Hand men had been finished off. No-one in the household had been killed, though three of the menfolk, the father, the oldest son, and a farmhand, had been badly beaten before being tied up and thrown into the barn with the other adult males and the younger children. There were eighteen in the household.
- I… I think I understand you, - said the father, whose name was Marko. - But… by Byelovoi, from what Masha said, it’s a terrible thing to suffer. -
Masha was the girl who had been under the Red Hand leader's boot. She nodded, glanced quickly at Yastreb, and shuddered. She was young, not far into womanhood, and she had vomited when she saw the Red Hand leader die.
- He saved us, but it was so horrible! - Masha said. There was still fear in her voice. - Please, sir, tell us there is a cure for the curse. -
Radul sighed. - We were on our way to find one. We were told that one certain cure exists, but it’s one only a certain Veela knows. That’s where we were going, to where the Veela called Myrallea lives. It’s been a long journey, and we pray it ends there. -
Yastreb stood up, fighting off a brief dizziness. - I need sleep. If you don’t want me under your roof, I understand. A blanket and some room in the barn or a shed. That’s all I need. -
He was telling the truth. As well as exhaustion, there was still the pain in his hands and throat and eyes, the still-sharpened senses threatened to overwhelm him, and he needed to use his Light magic on his wounded arm.
They gave him what he asked for, and he sat for a while in the barn, working healing on his arm, before he lay down in a bed of hay and let himself sink into deep sleep…
***
- There is a lesson that has been waiting for the right moment. Come with me. -
Baba Yaga took his hand and led him inside to her own room, where two moon-orbs shone faintly. She embraced him gently, and pressed her mouth to his for a gentle kiss. For an instant he froze in surprise.
When he could speak, he said, - Mistress… I didn't think that… -
- You missed your first Kupala Night, and both Kupala Nights since then, shalafei, - she said gently. - Tonight is Kupala Night. Let’s spend it together. Accept the friendship of my thighs. -
The surprise faded as she began to lift his tunic up over his head….
He felt awe and desire together as he beheld her naked, full-breasted and wide-hipped, with flawless pale skin... and beneath those sensations was a small touch of fear.
Would he be worthy of her kindness…?
They lay together for a time, softly kissing and caressing, before she carefully eased herself above him…
He did not want it to end.
But finally he reached an ecstatic climax, and she was hugging him close…
He was lying naked among the furs of a wide and comfortable bed, in a room lit by the glow of two moon-orbs.
He turned his head slowly and saw Baba Yaga lying next to him.
- Yastreb, you’re awake. -
She raised herself on one elbow and looked down at him with sadness in her eyes. Her hair was unbound and loose, and he realised that she too was naked.
- I miss you, my dearest, and I fear for you. I see where you are, a long way from home, and you are still grieving. -
- But I’m here with you! How can you say…? -
She placed a finger on his lips. - You’re here in a dream, Yastreb. I had to know what had happened after Koschei died, and I found a way to reach out to you.
- We’re meeting like this, in a dream of a happy time, of that first night. Open yourself to me, dushka. I can tell that you’re troubled, but you’ve grown…
- In just a short time you’ve been through much, but you’ve done very well. Yes. You’ve slain marauders and murderers, and… a Demon? A monster from the Hell Reign. You’ve made friends and allies, and you have a goal now, to learn control of the power he gifted you…
- Wait, Zantria? The Ancients are alive still? They slew Koschei? Gods be with you, with all of us! Go carefully, my dear. Have faith in yourself. I know you can succeed. I know that Koschei chose well. -
- I don’t know… I don’t know if I can make it…-
She pressed her mouth to his for a gentle kiss, then drew back and looked him in the eye.
- Here's a truth I learned long ago. In peril we find out just what we can achieve. I know you’ll surprise yourself. -
He faded back into deep sleep, and she was gone.
Baba Yaga lay still, waiting for the pain to subside, her hands clasped over her breasts.
Beneath her fingers the little figure of woven straw, seeded with some of the dried blood that she had scraped off the grass where Yastreb had fallen, crumbled away into dust.
- Be safe, dushka. -