PART I: WELCOME TO THE ARENA
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CHAPTER I: BLOOD RED SANDS
Every time it was the same, down to nearly every single fine detail. The drone of the crowds, to which I had become accustomed to long ago, the small circle, the floor dusted with sand, the four pillars, the spiked walls. The sand was a light tan color, but splatters of blood dried in the sun were strewn about the ground. The only difference was the opponent, standing on the other side, clad in a dingy yellow raiment, waiting behind the gate in anticipation. His goal was the same as mine, fight, and win. Or fight, and die.
If I wanted to, I could have mouthed along with the words. The words, they rang aloud over the excited screams of the crowd. "Good people of the Imperial City!" Just as I had expected, word for word, the same drivel that I'd heard a million times before. "Welcome, to the Arena!" The crowd grew louder on the final word. "Tonight, we have a clash of gladiators that will be remembered through the ages!" First it was my turn. "From the blue team, I give you, the fierce, deadly, axe-wielding Nord, Rothgaur the Red!" The announcer drew out each syllable in my name, and the crowd roared again. I stood waiting, having no desire to bask in my glory. "On the other side, from the yellow team, an archer with swiftness unmatched by any other!" An archer, great, just what I needed. "Straight from Morrowind, I give you, Andras Venim!"
This 'Andras Venim' was a lucky man, he had survived the arena thus far, but I didn't mind being the one to end his streak, forever. I had to do what I had to do so I could stay alive until next time. A squeal came from the rusty gate, and it began to roll down. I gripped my iron shield harder, raised my silver war axe, and charged forward. The dunmer stepped out into the circle and pointed his bow at me. He drew an arrow from his quiver and before I could even see him ready it, it was on it's way toward me.
I covered my chest with my shield, and tip on his arrow knocked against one of the iron slats with a sharp clang. The arrow snapped in half and bounced away into the sand. I clenched my hold on the axe, and raised it over my shoulder, swinging it down toward the dunmer. He dived and rolled to my left, my axe put a crevasse in the sand and bounced off the brick floor. I felt wood slam into the back of my head, he had struck my bluntly with his bow, something I had never seen before.
He was smart all right, I'd give him that. But he could be as smart as he wanted, it didn't matter, he'd still be the one to end up dying in the arena this day. I fell forward, onto one knee from the blow to my unarmored head. I couldn't see very well, everything looked bright, almost white. There was no time to lie down now, I turned as I stood, covering my face and neck with my shield, just in time for another arrow to knock into it and fall away.
With my vision still a little hazy, I could see him nock another arrow with the same speed he had already shown. I had gotten lucky with the last one, but my vision still hadn't come back all the way. I heard the whip of his bowstring and the arrow sailing through the air. It pierced the thin steel plate of my raiment, and dug it's head into my chest. It hurt, of course, but I could take it. It wasn't the first arrow I had ever taken.
I crouched, low to the ground, and covered myself with my shield. As soon as I heard the sound of his bow release, I jumped back and stood. His arrow flew between my legs and slid along the sand to a stop. I felt triumphant in evading his shot entirely, but I quickly realized my fault in moving further away from a ranger. I was not in a good place now, so I decided to take chance, it wasn't smart to gamble when one's life is at stake, but I didn't have many other choices. He had the upper hand right now, and that could mean my death just as well, it was time to turn the tide.
I kept my hand stable, bent my arm at a right angle, and rotated my shoulder so the head of my axe pointed slightly backward. I looked right at my opponent, and flung the axe. It spun beautifully, as though it were made to be thrown. The spike on the back edge dug into his left shoulder and slipped back out, hitting the floor with a sound muffled by the sand. He stumbled backward, gripping his shoulder with the opposite hand, blood seeped through his fingers, it looked vivid against his pale grey skin.
After the axe left my hand, I had already started running toward him. Acting quickly, he tried to kick my axe away, but he ended up digging his sandal through the sand and his foot stopped against the brick. He had now lost his only chance to win, and his fate was sealed. He held his bow diagonally in front of him, the only defense he had against my wrath. I bucked forward with my shield, hitting him hard. His arm buckled against his body, and he lost his footing. The sand he had slipped on provided him no protection as he fell hard on his back against the brick, the back of his head knocking against it as well, making a sound that I could hear even over the crowd.
His bow was broken in half, one piece in the grip of his twisted and broken fingers, the other on the ground above his head. I bent over to grab my axe, and the little bastard rolled to my left, kicking me in the back of the knee as he stopped. My leg collapsed instantly and my knee hit the ground. I could hear him stand and whip a small blade from it's sheath. There was no way I'd let him get to me first. I swung my shield toward him, and stood up and the same time, which added to the force of the attack.
The center of my shield hit him directly in the side of the head, and he staggered to his right side. It was all over now. He swung his dagger wildly in my direction as he tried to regain balance, his last effort to survive. The first swipe made a long splice along my left bicep, and it blood began to leak. I had had plenty of wounds like this in my lifetime, not only from fighting in the arena, it was nothing but a scratch.
I held up my shield, I doubt the bastard could even see anything, much less me. His dagger bounced away from my defense and his broken fingers weren't nearly strong enough to hold onto it. It fell a few feet away with a quiet clatter. He bent over, cringing and whimpering. I stopped to look at him for a moment, he looked pitiful. "May Stendarr have mercy on you, because I certainly won't." I said to him, not bothering to wonder if he could even hear me over the ringing in his ears.
He would die here, with no honor, much unlike a Nord such as I. I lifted my axe high over my head, and the crowd grew louder than they had been all day. As I brought my hand down, the blade dug deep into his hunched back. Releasing the handle, his body fell forward, lifeless. A murder in front of hundreds of people, and all they did was cheer.
I looked down at the poor dunmer's fresh corpse, he had been a man, with a name, maybe a house, maybe a family. He had thrown everything away. And for what? Fame? Fortune? Was anything worth it now? I placed my foot on his head, and grasped the handle of my axe, wrenching it out with one hard tug. Most of the blade was completely covered in blood, and it was splattered about everywhere else, the same blood that seeped from his body and stained the sand.
I turned away and walked to the edge of the arena. As I entered the covering to the bloodworks, the gate shrieked and slid up behind me.