If it was simply able to be considered by itself, the room, with its perfect reflections of projectiles, forming and crashing into each other at perfect angles, in perfect intervals, would have been quite an amazing and beautiful sight. Each dart, each spear, each stone, reflected perfectly twelve times, then in pieces and fragments thousands of times more, would have seemed to dance together, joining, separating, breaking, falling, and flying yet again. The colors! The geometrics! What a sight to see!
But, these lights- now objects- were not by themselves alone in that room. There were people in there as well- real people, shadows of people, parts of people- and this changed the scene from one that might have been beautiful to one of definite horror. Here were people- people about to be ripped to shreds by the very weapons of their own making.
When Merik had taunted, he knew full well that, for that instant, he had the upper hand of the battle. Nothing Uai could do could really get her past that lack of breathable air, of which Merik had quite a bit left of. Still, as he had begin his approach toward her, he had been cautious. To him, she was like a cat cornered: she might have been caught, but she certainly was not going to go down easy. And, based on the fact that she was running towards him now, surrender did not seem quite her style.
She was chanting, chanting and running. Merik stopped, and listened, with the small smile on his face. Blah de blah blah. Let her chant. It would only dry her throat out more. But it sure did take her a long time to prepare her spells.
It was while he was half listening to her summons that he noticed it: the room suddenly had a lot more water in it than before. There was water- water everywhere. True, it was all moving in small little pieces, like his own darts only-
Only he was not controlling them. Here one hit him on his face, with a hard enough impact that a pinprick of blood began to flow. The smile on his face faded. At this point, what was real and what was not were practically inseparable. A stone hit him on the right leg. And as for the whip that was coming towards him...
He probably could have dodged, some, and missed the full force of the blow. After all, he knew she was going to strike out. Here it was. But with the other twelve whips, on each coming from where a Uai would have stood had she been in each of the areana's twelve slices, and the partial whips everywhere else, and the stones, and the darts, and the spears- it would only be escaping one pain for another, or, quite possibly, multiple others. And, by all honesty, if he fell- then, there would only be one side of himself to defend from... well, everything.
And so, he let the whip come, and felt the pain as it whirled and cut through cloth and skin on his left leg. He felt the pull as the rope was yanked and his right leg out from under him. He felt himself falling forward, instinctively placing his hands out in front as he hit the ground.
It was painful. But it did not stop him from doing what he needed to do next. He reached behind him, grabbing both bow and three arrows. Then, lying stomach to the floor, he aimed and shot two of the arrows. If he judged right, one should pass slightly to the left of the original Uai, the other, slightly to the right.
Provided she did not do anything, and no rock or spear or dart hit them, they would crash straight into one of the mirrors, which, by all probability, had not yet been cracked, and splinter it in such a way that one more hit however faint, would shatter it. Around the room, twenty two more arrows had been fired, and with them all the fragments of arrows. The last arrow he had been intending to keep in his bow, holding it as a deterrent for this opponent. But, even as he fired the other two, he set that thought aside, and allowed it, along with the arrow and the bow, to fall to the ground.
There was no point in charades now. The game was over, and now it was a matter of life or death, or quite possibly, life and death.
Around him, what water he controlled and was not using to breath was forming into multiple thin sheets, separated by air. They were nothing close to being able to stop a weapon, but they would be enough to at least lessen the impact of the fragments and the stones, which, if the mirrors did reach the almost shattering point, would likely be multiplied yet another thousand times.
This was a consequence he was willing to take. For in this multiplicity, there was a chance that it may all come back to one. But he could do no more himself. And, of all the shadows and beings in this arena, none could distinguish the false from the truth. But, there was one, perhaps, who could make it a little clearer.
He called out, "It's me or the mirrors, Uai. Make your choice. You don't have long."
Indeed, with the arrows reaching out towards the mirrors, there would be weapons everywhere. But as to what Uai would do, Merik did not know. All he knew was that, whatever happened, some truth, some reality, some thing- must be revealed. But whether that truth would be revealed while he yet breathed in this arena, well...
Only time would tell.
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