Easy Betrayals

Easy Betrayals by Richard Baker

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Authors: Richard Baker
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bone.
    “Now, now,” he said, hissing in mockery.
    Somehow Belgin twisted out of the stroke, taking a long, jagged cut across his scalp but keeping his head on his shoulders. White spots starred his vision. He stumbled and fell backwards to the rotten boardwalk, blinking. Doppelgangers. Of course.
    Aleena began to work some kind of spell, but the Trandon-duplicate turned on her. With one brutal stroke he clubbed the graceful noblewoman to the ground with a forearm that had grown into a spiked mace. Aleena’s half-formed spell burst in a shower of fiery sparks, hissing and sizzling in the dark mire of the street.
    Marks howled as an ember struck him, then hopped away, hobbled by the lasso around his torso. Belgin caught the end of the rope and yanked Marks off his feet as he rolled away from Kern’s attack. “Stick around,” he muttered. The Kern-thing smashed its murderous blade down at the bard, but Belgin scrambled back and somehow found his feet.
    In the street, Miltiades rose to his knees, groping for his warhammer. “When did you take Jacob?” he rasped. “When?”
    “I haven’t been Jacob in a long time, human fool,” the blond-haired fighter replied. He raised his sword for the killing stroke. Miltiades, wounded and unarmed, raised his hand to ward off the blow.
    From the darkness behind Jacob a gleam of silver drifted through the air, tumbling slowly before it crashed into the fighter with the shrill ring of metal meeting metal. What now? Belgin wasted a precious moment gaping at the scene in front of him before a flurry of violent slashes and stabs from the Kern-doppelganger sent him scrabbling and squirming backwards, narrowly avoiding an ugly death. “Bastard!” he swore angrily. He finally found the rapier at his belt and drew the blade in time to drive the false Kern back a step or two.
    Behind the Kern-doppelganger, Jacob reeled drunkenly and stumbled away from Miltiades. A dwarven fighting axe lodged in the side of the fighter’s head. Amazingly, the creature reached up and wrenched the gory blade from his skull. Then a small, stocky shape barreled into his legs, taking him down.
    “Stab me when I’m not looking, will you?” shouted Rings. “Leave me to die in a stinking desert, eh? By Moradin’s beard, I’ll teach you better, you traitorous wretch!” The dwarf found his axe with one hand and set to work, slamming the heavy blade into Jacob over and over again.
    Belgin danced back a step as the false Kern slid to one side, warily eyeing the new threat. The Trandon-doppelganger joined him, pressing Belgin with massive blows that split boards and splintered anything in their path.
    “Come on! We can still get them!” he hissed to his comrade in arms.
    “Not if I cheat,” Belgin said. He raised one hand and spoke an old spell, one of the few he knew that was any good in a fight. From his hand, a green arrowhead of energy streaked out to strike the Trandon-doppelganger in its chest. The bolt of energy slagged at once into a vitriolic patch that seethed and bubbled, eating its way into the creature’s body. Shrieking with inhuman pain, the Trandon-thing staggered back and fell, its heels drumming against the rotten planking.
    The Kern-duplicate snarled in anger and struck back, cutting a shallow gash across Belgin’s left arm and another under his ribs. The sharper riposted, running the doppelganger through its midsection with his rapier. The creature hissed and recoiled, then pressed forward again. “Fine,” muttered Belgin. He danced back two steps, steadied his hand, then rammed the point of his rapier into the monster’s left eye. The doppelganger collapsed like a puppet with its strings cut. Belgin panted and watched his fallen foes for signs of consciousness, his wounds stinging abominably.
    No one around him was moving.
    Aleena lay dazed on the ground, an ugly purple mark on her forehead. Slowly, Miltiades hauled himself to his feet. With his teeth clenched, he spoke a prayer to

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