Far Horizons: Tales of Sci-Fi, Fantasy and Horror. Issue #11 February 2015 | Page 19

and three hundred years old, the entire length of the club was covered in tiny lines and marks that swirled and came together in patterns. Every line had been filled with hand beaten age blackened silver no thicker than a woman’s hair. Every line, every sigil, part of a single pattern of silver. There was no magic to the club, no spells had been cast upon it, no enchantment lingered within it. It had no power. But that was its purpose. For as it came into contact with the monster’s skull the magic that surrounded the monster flowed into the silver patterns and reached the sigils. Magic was drained away, splintered and shattered and thrown to the void. The ironwood club smashed the scales and cracked the mighty skull beneath and the monster knew pain such as it had not felt for centuries. I saw the sergeant’s blow and I saw the creature begin to turn, Peck was so close he would be torn into pieces. Suddenly the revolver was a feather and it floated into position. The boom was less than before but I could hear nothing else, every sound had died around us. The bullet struck the monster in its side, just above the waist where the scales were smaller. It bellowed in pain as the bullet smashed deep into its flesh and a great gout of thick greenish fluid spurted out and splattered across the deck. ture’s knees shattered. One leg collapsed and it half fell, blocking its fall with one clawed hand. It lifted its face toward me and roared its hatred, teeth like daggers spread wide, tentacles writhing from side to side. I took careful aim, so close now that my outstretched arm could almost touch it. Time slowed, everything stopped moving, the gentle breeze stopped, gulls hung in the sky overhead. The boom was muffled, the cloud of smoke hid the monster’s face from me and the revolver floated upwards. Then everything started again. My wrist was screaming in pain from firing the oversized revolver so often, the deck beneath my feet was heaving and bucking, I was falling. But as I fell I watched my last bullet fly past the tentacles and enter that fang lined mouth, I saw the bullet, more than half an inch of lead shot strike the back of the creature’s throat and punch straight through. I saw flesh and fluid pulverised to a mush. I saw the bullet pass through the creature’s brain and strike the back of its skull. I saw shock waves ripple across its head as the skull shattered sending shards of bone through what remained of the brain and head. I saw the back of its skull and head collapse, fragments of bone held together by flaps of skin and scale. I fought the revolver down and back onto the creature and fired again. It was trying to turn back toward me but slowly now, it was hurt. My shot struck it in the belly and tore through flesh and fluid and great loops and strands of grey. I saw the stained wooden deck of the ship race toward my face and everything became fire and pain and darkness. It staggered toward me and once more the sergeant’s ironwood club came from behind, so vast was the creature that as it stood this close I could not see Peck at all. Still he struck hard and well and one of the creatu- Normally I never notice myself waking up, I am just awake. But sometimes, if I am very tired or hurt I wake slowly. The world comes into focus from nothing to a blur and then to clarity. # PAGE 19