Looking for Limza
Paso sprinted out of the trees and into the empty ruins of a temple city. The skink was breathing hard and casting terrified glances behind him. Darting among the crumbling and overgrown masonry, he dived into a gully between two half-broken walls, covered by a canopy of ferns.
Paso's chest went up and down in the dappled green shadows of his hiding place. A millipede scuttled over his foot. The entire jungle murmured quietly. Paso poked his head slowly through the foliage.
"Ah, a companion in this deserted place. Capital!"
The voice surprised him so much that he leapt bodily over the nearest wall and buried his head under his arms before he even knew what happened.
"I say, where on earth did you go?" continued the voice. Peaking through his fingers, Paso was confronted by the grinning face of another skink. Wearing a feathered headdress.
He picked himself up, sheepishly.
"Oh, uh, good morning, your worship," he began.
"Call me Yoatl," cried the priest. "And who might you be?"
"Paso, your- Yoatl. Fifth infantry, sir. I was just...trying to find my way back to my company. I was separated in an engagement with-"
"No troops around here, as far as I know," said Yoatl, who was already moving off through the ruins, looking all around. "This is the abandoned city of Limza. Strategically inconsequential, or so everyone thought. The Mage Priests sent me to make sure there aren't any precious artefacts left. If you help me look, I'll guide you back to the forward operating base near Axlotl. I'm sure they'll sort you out there. It's a good thing you found me. Not just rats abroad in this territory. I'll keep you safe."
"Thank you, your worship," said Paso, although the priest was already out of sight among the stones and overgrowth.
Eyes flickering back and forth, Paso began to pace silently backwards.
"You look in the direction you advance, soldier!" came a new voice directly behind him. "Didn't your commander teach you that?"
Paso shrieked and fell to the ground once again, while the newcomer, another skink who seemed accustomed to command, glared down at him.
Picking himself up, Paso saw Yoatl reappear from behind a crumbling wall.
"A third visitor! The Old Ones have smiled upon us today. Name's Yoatl." He bowed. "And this is young Paso, separated tragically in the line of duty."
"Captain Iktan at your service," barked the officer, and he waved at a ruby terradon that was preening itself on a nearby palm tree. "And this is Takol. Our mission is to scout this area for any signs of skaven or cultist activity."
"Cultists?" squeaked Paso. "You mean the Lost Clan?"
"Have you encountered them?" inquired Iktan, with a penetrating stare.
Paso shook his head, while Yoatl spoke up:
"We have seen no sign of either quarry, for which we are very grateful. But we will assist you in your duty. Let us scour these ruins. Any useful artefacts I will return to my masters, and any hiding vermin - of either variety - you can report to yours. And Paso here will accompany whichever of us he prefers back to his station."
Iktan grunted while Paso stared at his feet. He watched the other skinks stalk off among the low, disused buildings, through twisted alleys that led to the modest central pyramid a little ways off. Large clouds were building overhead, and a few drops had already splashed over dusty stones. When the priest and the captain were out of sight, Paso turned and crept away in the opposite direction.
He went directly for the short little tree where Takol the crimson terradon perched, and scurried up into its fronds. He emerged face to face with the large flying reptile, its beak much sharper than he expected. It considered him. Cautiously, he reached out a hand and stroked its neck. It did not respond. Even more cautiously, he climbed up and straddled the beast.
"Go! Fly! Giddyup!" hissed Paso. The terradon turned its head to consider him. Then, almost ponderously, it rolled, tipping Paso neatly off its back and out of the tree.
He barely had time to scream before he hit the ground, where, to his surprise, he crashed through several rotting planks of wood into a damp, lightless cellar.
"Stupid red bat," Paso muttered, pain twanging all across his body. Dusting himself off, he froze.
There was a distinct scurrying sound in the darkness. Slowly lifting his head, Paso saw the unmistakable gleam of two wet eyes in the gloom. They turned and vanished away into unknown regions. Paso thought it was suddenly very cold down here.
Scrabbling for an exit, he found stairs, leading up. On the first of them, there was a long thin object that he instinctively grabbed as he rushed upwards, pushing aside more rotten planks to emerge back into the world of radiant colours.
"I see you have found an intriguing hidden storage space," said Yoatl, who was watching him from not far away. "And in very short time, too. Almost like you knew it was there. Additionally, you appear to be armed. Is there something you would like to tell me, young... Paso, was it? Or do you have another name, given to you by the Lost Clan?"
"Your worship, what are you-"
"You think I wouldn't recognise the carvings on your weapon?"
Paso looked down at the thin, grey tube in his hands. It was a blowpipe, inscribed with strange symbols.
"I just found this, it's not mine!"
"So a cultist left it behind, did they? A sacred weapon built with great difficulty for magical accuracy - its owner decided not to keep it?"
The feathers on the priest's headdress rustled as the old skink grinned. He continued:
"I knew you weren't a soldier. Too skittish, even for a newspawn." He watched Paso squirm, in confirmation of his words. "I think you'd better hand that blowpipe over to me."
Paso stared as Yoatl held out a claw. He felt the almost imperceptible weight of the thin object in his hands. The moment stretched. The light rain seemed to be getting heavier.
"I am no cultist," Paso said, quietly. "Please have mercy upon me."
He held out the blowpipe. Yoatl reached forward to take it - only to be yanked backwards into the arms of Captain Iktan. In a flash, the officer had an obsidian knife at the throat of the priest.
"Reclaiming something you misplaced, eh?" hissed the military lizard. "Trying to frame this upstanding soldier for your own crimes? Is that your game, eh?"
"Now see here," stuttered Yoatl, his eyes wide. "Let's not do anything rash. We're all sensible lizards."
"Are we? Because I don't know either one of you," rasped Iktan, clutching the knife tighter, while his other hand reached inside the priest's vestments, where it extracted something that shone in the half light. "Now let's see what we have here. A priest in possession of the Golden Diadem of Tzunki. And what's this? The ivory astrolabe of Tlaxtlan."
"Vital relics that I am taking to my masters-"
"Indeed?" sneered Iktan. "Would they be the Mage Priests? Or warmblood looters from the Old World? These items were reported missing from their vault only last week. It's a pleasure to meet you, so-called Jaguar Thief!"
Paso gasped. "You're the legendary Jaguar!? You sold irreplaceable plaques of the Old Ones to our enemies! You lifted fifty-seven sacks of gemstones from the High Temple of Itza!"
The priest no longer quivered pitiously under Iktan's knife. His expression had changed. He grinned like a piranha.
"The pleasure," he drawled, "is all mine!"
With a sudden swipe of his tail, he knocked away Iktan's legs and vaulted over a nearby wall. Leaping up again, the Captain gave a whistle and was immediately in pursuit. Paso watched in stupefaction as the not-exactly-a-priest flung away his headdress and sprinted into the city, only to be bowled over by a swift scarlet blur from the side. Takol fluttered down nearby as the Jaguar lay panting in the dirt, and Iktan arrived moments later. But Yoatl was laughing.
"You must be the freelancer I've heard so much about. Let's see how good you are!"
With another agile tail movement, he was up again, and a perfectly aimed blow sent the dagger flying from Iktan's hand. The two skinks were immediately toe-to-toe, scrabbling, biting and pummelling each other in a flurry of action. Iktan pinned his quarry to a wall.
"Don't just stand there, kid! Shoot him!"
"Do not aid this lizard. He is as much an imposter as I. All he seeks is the bounty on my head!" screamed Yoatl, as he wriggled free and sent his foe reeling with a kick to the chest. Iktan roared.
"I only hunt the enemies of Lustria! You serve none but yourself!"
"Paso! If you shoot this lizard I will give you the Diadem. I'll make sure you never have to fight another battle!"
Paso looked down at the strange grey blowpipe, and back up at the brawling lizards.
"I know you won't do it," said Iktan, breathing hard as he held Yoatl firm in a headlock. "You're a good lizard and a patriot. But as a reward, I will give you half the bounty if you shoot the Jaguar."
Both combatants looked expectantly at Paso, the fight poised in a fragile stalemate. Paso took several steps backwards, and the thin pipe fell from his hands.
"Stop it, please! Just stop fighting! Everywhere I go, there's nothing but fighting!"
Iktan snarled, and dug his teeth into Yoatl's shoulder. The thief screamed and fell writhing to the ground, and the bounty hunter was upon him, binding his hands securely behind his back with twine. Iktan stood again with a grunt of victory and turned to Paso.
"No more fighting, eh?" he said. "I'd like that. Ah."
Iktan put his hand to his neck. There was a tiny feathered dart there. He pulled it out and stared at it. Then he collapsed beside his captive, foam dribbling from his mouth.
Yoatl turned to Paso in amazement.
"You did it! You saved-"
"That wasn't me!" shrieked Paso, face a mask of horror. He turned and ran straight into a new arrival. Paso tripped back in fright, landing hard on the ground, and looked up at the figure just as lightning struck the bulk of the dark pyramid behind, and the storm opened up its deluge.
In the brilliance of the flash, Paso saw a skink in a ragged grey cloak, its face covered by a wooden mask resembling a rat's face with long, twisted horns. On its chest a crude equilateral triangle was carved in blood.
"Good gods," breathed Yoatl. Paso was speechless.
As rain thundered down, splashing across weathered flagstones, the terrible figure advanced. Paso scrabbled backwards, desperately flailing towards the Jaguar Thief, who was still bound by Iktan's twine. Dimly, he saw the red terradon take to the air and squawk away towards the trees. After a few steps, the rat-faced skink stopped and bent to pick up the grey blowpipe. Through the sheets of rain, Paso glimpsed other lizards among the ruins now, all wearing grey robes.
"Quick! There!" hissed the ex-priest, by Paso's ear. He looked at what Yoatl was indicating: the late Iktan's obsidian blade. While the cult leader examined the pipe, Paso dashed for the dagger and quickly freed the thief. He saw the other lizards lift their own blowpipes to their mouths, but the masked leader raised a claw to stop them.
"Run," it said, in a cracked, maddening voice. "We will not hunt you. I cannot say as much for our colleagues."
There was another flash of lightening, fixing the entire scene in incandescence, and for the briefest moment Paso thought he saw huge, lumbering shapes rearing upwards. Thunder rolled, and with it a sickening, screeching cry.
"They have rat ogres!" shrieked Yoatl, eyes bulging in horror. "Or something worse. Run!"
The two of them sprinted into the rain. Paso felt terror in every part of his body. Behind them, chilling howls echoed through the city, frighteningly powerful and never far away. They seemed to be surrounded.
"This way!" shouted Yoatl, splashing among some masonry and weaving through the streets. Paso realised they were at the base of the pyramid itself, and his companion was bounding up the staircase. Halfway to the summit, there was a large entrance. "Hurry!" screamed the skink, beckoning desperately.
Paso glanced back down, and saw huge shapes converging below. As they bounded towards him, he leapt up to where Yoatl stood, and dived inside. He glimpsed his companion pulling a lever in the wall, and a huge slab of stone slammed down, leaving them in sudden darkness and reducing the pounding rain to a faint murmur outside. The two dripping skinks listened to each other breathe.
"How did you-"
"Robbed enough abandoned temples to know how they work. We're sealed in. Now let's see..." said Yoatl. There was a scratching sound, and a torch ignited the darkness. "Good. We should be safe in here for now. With any luck, they'll send someone looking for the lost bounty hunter. Or maybe the cultists will get bored."
"Um, are you sure we're alone in here?" asked Paso. There was a silence.
"Good question. Let's search the lower levels."
It was a small temple. An examination of the lightless corridors, sanctums and storage rooms produced nothing. They returned to the main entrance and sagged down.
"Lizards worshipping rats," mused Yoatl. "Thought I'd seen everything. Hey kid, sorry for pretending to be a priest."
"I didn't really get separated from my unit," responded Paso, glumly. "I'm a des-"
He stopped at the sudden and amazingly loud sound of chittering and scrabbling, near at hand. Both lizards felt their blood freeze.
"What...was that?" said Yoatl.
"We checked the lower levels! There's nothing here!"
Something very close screeched horribly. Yoatl gulped, and stared squarely at Paso.
"It came from above," he said.